enhance-visitors
Enhance your ESLint visitors with shared logic
Last updated 8 years ago by jfmengels .
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Enhance your ESLint visitors with shared logic.

Install

$ npm install --save enhance-visitors

Purpose

The purpose of this tool is to simplify the writing of rules with common logic. Extract the common logic into a separate file, and then write rules to build on top.

Traversal order

For the enhancer, the traversal is done just as usual, one node at a time. The traversal is not done all at once for the enhancer, and then all at once for the rule implementation. Rather, it's done one Node at a time, first for the enhancer (or rather, whatever you put first ) but rather the

API

.mergeVisitors([visitors])

Merges multiple visitor objects, so that all visitors for a node type are ran one after the other, in first-to-last order. For <type>:exit visitors, they are traversed last-to-first.

visitors: object[]

An array of visitor objects, such as {CallExpression: fn1, Identifier: fn2, ...}.

Example

const enhance = require('enhance-visitors');

function log(message) {
  return function() {
    console.log(message);
  };
}

module.exports = function(context) {
  return enhance.mergeVisitors([
    {
      'CallExpression': log('1 - CallExpression entry'),
      'CallExpression:exit': log('1 - CallExpression exit')
    },
    {
      'CallExpression': log('2 - CallExpression entry'),
      'CallExpression:exit': log('2 - CallExpression exit')
    }
  ]);
}

Given the following code: foo(), it should print

1 - CallExpression entry
2 - CallExpression entry
2 - CallExpression exit
1 - CallExpression exit

Usage example: Detection of a package import

Let's say you have a npm package called unicorn, and that you are writing an ESLint plugin for it, so that users use it as intended and avoid pitfalls. You will write multiple rules for it, and most or all of them will need to know which variable references unicorn.

import uni from 'unicorn'; // <-- The variable `uni` references my package

In order not to have to write the same detection logic in every one of your rules, let's write an enhancer. In this example, we will write it in <root>/rules/core/unicornSeeker.js. We'll keep it simple and only detect an import using the import keyword and not using require, and then only with the ImportDefaultSpecifier syntax.

module.exports = function enhance(imports) {
  return {
    ImportDeclaration: function (node) {
      if (node.source.value === 'unicorn') {
        node.specifiers.forEach(function (specifier) {
          if (specifier.type === 'ImportDefaultSpecifier') {
            imports.unicorn = specifier.local.name;
          }
        });
      }
    }
  };
};

This visitors object will be traversed along and before your rule implementation. What it does is traverse your AST, find ImportDeclaration nodes, and store relevant information in imports. Then in your rule file (<root>/rules/no-unknown-methods.js, which detects methods that do not exist in the package), we'll have:

const enhance = require('enhance-visitors');
const unicornSeeker = require('./core/unicornSeeker');

const existingMethods = [
  'makeRainbow', 'trample', 'flyWithGrace'
];

module.exports = function (context) {
  const imports = {};

  return enhance.mergeVisitors([ // Noteworthy line 1
    unicornSeekerEnhancer(imports), // Noteworthy line 2
    {
      CallExpression: function (node) {
        const callee = node.callee;
        if (callee.type === 'MemberExpression' &&
          callee.object.type === 'Identifier' &&
          callee.object.name === imports.unicorn && // Noteworthy line 3
          callee.property.type === 'Identifier' &&
          existingMethods.indexOf(callee.property.name) === -1
        ) {
          context.report({
            node: node,
            message: 'Unknown `unicorn` method ' + callee.property.name
          });
        }
      }
    }
  ]);
};

It looks pretty much like a normal rule implementation, but there are a few differences. In Noteworthy line 1 & 2, we are merging the unicornSeeker enhancer we wrote earlier with the rule implementation. This will make unicornSeeker traverse the AST and collect information that we can then use like we did in Noteworthy line 3.

.visitIf([predicates])

Returns a function fn that takes a visitor function visitor. When fn is called (usually an AST node), visitor will get called with the same argument only if all predicates, also called with the same argument, return a truthy value.

This essentially allows writing less and/or shorter reusable conditions inside your visitor.

predicates: function[]

An array of predicate functions, that take a AST node as argument and return a boolean.

Example

const enhance = require('enhance-visitors');

function isRequireCall(node) {
  return node &&
    node.callee &&
    node.callee.type === 'Identifier' &&
    node.callee.name === 'require' &&
    node.arguments.length === 1 &&
    node.arguments[0].type === 'Literal';
}

module.exports = function(context) {
  return {
    CallExpression: enhance.visitIf([isRequireCall])(node => {
      if (node.arguments[0] !== 'unicorn') {
        context.report({
          node,
          message: 'You only need to use `unicorn`'
        })
      }
    })
  };
}

License

MIT © Jeroen Engels

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