This package contains a parser and stringifier for the KDL Document Language, a node-based, human-friendly configuration and serialization format.
The parser in this package focuses on parsing documents in a way that allows for format-preserving modifications. This is most useful when working with KDL files maintained by humans.
yarn add @bgotink/kdl
# or
npm install @bgotink/kdl
# or
pnpm add @bgotink/kdl
# or ...
The examples below assume a Node.js environment.
The @bgotink/kdl
package works in any javascript runtime, including browsers, as long as it supports relatively modern browser standards.
If you're trying to run these samples in a non-Node.js runtime, replace the import for assert
with something equivalent in your runtime.
import {parse, format} from "@bgotink/kdl";
import assert from "node:assert/strict";
const doc = parse(String.raw`
node "value" #"other value"# 2.0 4 #false \
#null -0 {
child; "child too"
}
`);
doc.nodes[0].children.nodes[0].entries.push(
parse(
String.raw`/-lorem="ipsum" \
dolor=#true`,
{as: "entry"},
),
);
assert.equal(
format(doc),
String.raw`
node "value" #"other value"# 2.0 4 #false \
#null -0 {
child /-lorem="ipsum" \
dolor=#true; "child too"
}
`,
);
This package exports function from @bgotink/kdl/json
to parse and stringify KDL documents as JSON-in-KDL (JiK) 4.0.0. For information on the format, see the JiK 4.0.0 specification.
import {parse} from "@bgotink/kdl/json";
import assert from "node:assert/strict";
assert.deepEqual(
parse(
String.raw`
- {
prop #false
otherProp {
- 0
- 2
- 4
}
}
`,
),
{
prop: false,
otherProp: [0, 2, 4],
},
);
There are four functions:
parse
andstringify
turn text into the encoded JSON value and back. These functions are useful for encoding/decoding entire JiK files.toJson
andfromJson
turn KDL nodes into the encoded JSON value and back. These functions give more fine-grained control over the output, and can be used for e.g. encoding/decoding a JiK node embedded in a KDL document.
The package contains utilities for (de)serialization in @bgotink/kdl/dessert
.
import {parse} from "@bgotink/kdl/dessert";
import assert from "node:assert/strict";
assert.deepEqual(
parse(
String.raw`
name "my-package"
dependency "@bgotink/kdl" range="^0.2.0"
dependency "prettier" range="^3" dev=#true
`,
(ctx) => {
const dependencies = {};
const devDependencies = {};
const name = ctx.child.single.required("name", (ctx) =>
ctx.argument.required("string"),
);
for (const dependency of ctx.children("dependency", (ctx) => ({
name: ctx.argument.required("string"),
range: ctx.property("range", "string") ?? "*",
dev: ctx.property("dev", "boolean") ?? false,
}))) {
(dependency.dev ? devDependencies : dependencies)[dependency.name] =
dependency.range;
}
return {name, dependencies, devDependencies};
},
),
{
name: "my-package",
dependencies: {
"@bgotink/kdl": "^0.2.0",
},
devDependencies: {
prettier: "^3",
},
},
);
The package exports two functions from @bgotink/kdl/v1-compat
to support documents written in KDL v1:
parse
parses a KDL v1 document and transforms all linked formatting information to turn it into a valid KDL v2 document. If the resulting document is passed toformat()
, the resulting string will be the same document but in KDL v2 syntax. It will include all comments and formatting applied by the original document's author.parseCompat
parses a document that's either KDL v2 or KDL v1 and returns a valid KDL v2 document. This is a helper function that combines the regularparse
function with the v1-compatparse
function into a single function that supports both formats.
This package turns KDL documents into JavaScript objects and vice versa. It is therefore limited by the JavaScript language.
Multiple properties with the same name are allowed. All duplicated will be preserved, meaning those documents will correctly round-trip. When using node.getProperty()
/node.getProperties()
/node.getPropertyEntry()
, the last property with that name's value will be returned, effectively shadowing any earlier duplicates. Using node.getPropertyEntries()
/node.entries
does expose the shadowed duplicates, leaving it up to the caller to handle these. Passing the node through clearFormat()
removes these shadowed duplicates.
JavaScript stores all numbers as 64-bit IEEE 754 floating point numbers. This limits what integer values can be used safely. These limits are lower than you might expect if you're used to working in environments that have a separate 64-bit integer data type.
The original representation of parsed numbers is retained, unless clearFormat
is called on the value or any entry/node/document containing the value.
This package is licensed under the MIT license, which can be found in LICENSE.md
.
The test suite at test/upstream
is part of the KDL specification and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.