An error-tolerant JavaScript parser written in JavaScript.
This parser will parse any text into an ESTree syntax tree that is a reasonable approximation of what it might mean as a JavaScript program.
It will, to recover from missing brackets, treat whitespace as
significant, which has the downside that it might mis-parse a valid
but weirdly indented file. It is recommended to always try a parse
with the regular acorn
parser first, and only fall back to this
parser when that one finds syntax errors.
Acorn is open source software released under an MIT license.
You are welcome to report bugs or create pull requests on github.
The easiest way to install acorn-loose is from npm
:
npm install acorn-loose
Alternately, you can download the source and build acorn yourself:
git clone https://github.com/acornjs/acorn.git
cd acorn
npm install
parse(input, options)
takes an input string and a set of options
(the same options as
acorn
takes), and returns a syntax tree, even if the code isn't
syntactically valid. It'll insert identifier nodes with name "✖"
as
placeholders in places where it can't make sense of the input. Depends
on the acorn
package, because it uses the same tokenizer.
var acornLoose = require("acorn-loose");
console.log(acornLoose.parse("1 / * 4 )[2]", {ecmaVersion: 2020}));
Like the regular parser, the loose parser supports plugins. You can
take the LooseParser
class exported by the module, and call its
static extend
method with one or more plugins to get a customized
parser class. The class has a static parse
method that acts like the
top-level parse
method.
isDummy(node)
takes a Node
and returns true
if it is a dummy node
inserted by the parser. The function performs a simple equality check on the
node's name.