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| 1 | +/** |
| 2 | + * Note: The implementation here is loosely based on the jsx and tsx parsers in 'jscodeshift'. It doesn't expose its |
| 3 | + * parsers, so we have to provide our own if we want to use anything besides the default. Fortunately, its parsers turn |
| 4 | + * out to just be wrappers around `babel.parse` with certain options set. The options chosen here are different from the |
| 5 | + * `jscodeshift` parsers in that a) unrecognized and deprecated options and options set to default values have been |
| 6 | + * removed, and b) all standard plugins are included, meaning the widest range of user code is able to be parsed. |
| 7 | + */ |
| 8 | + |
| 9 | +import * as babel from '@babel/parser'; |
| 10 | +import { File } from '@babel/types'; |
| 11 | + |
| 12 | +type Parser = { |
| 13 | + parse: (code: string) => babel.ParseResult<File>; |
| 14 | +}; |
| 15 | + |
| 16 | +const jsxOptions: babel.ParserOptions = { |
| 17 | + // Nextjs supports dynamic import, so this seems like a good idea |
| 18 | + allowImportExportEverywhere: true, |
| 19 | + // We're only supporting wrapping in ESM pages |
| 20 | + sourceType: 'module', |
| 21 | + // Without `tokens`, jsx parsing breaks |
| 22 | + tokens: true, |
| 23 | + // The maximal set of non-mutually-exclusive standard plugins, so as to support as much weird syntax in our users' |
| 24 | + // code as possible |
| 25 | + plugins: [ |
| 26 | + 'asyncDoExpressions', |
| 27 | + 'decimal', |
| 28 | + ['decorators', { decoratorsBeforeExport: false }], |
| 29 | + 'decoratorAutoAccessors', |
| 30 | + 'destructuringPrivate', |
| 31 | + 'doExpressions', |
| 32 | + 'estree', |
| 33 | + 'exportDefaultFrom', |
| 34 | + 'functionBind', |
| 35 | + 'importMeta', |
| 36 | + 'importAssertions', |
| 37 | + 'jsx', |
| 38 | + 'moduleBlocks', |
| 39 | + 'partialApplication', |
| 40 | + ['pipelineOperator', { proposal: 'hack', topicToken: '^' }], |
| 41 | + 'regexpUnicodeSets', |
| 42 | + 'throwExpressions', |
| 43 | + ] as babel.ParserPlugin[], |
| 44 | +}; |
| 45 | + |
| 46 | +const tsxOptions = { |
| 47 | + ...jsxOptions, |
| 48 | + // Because `jsxOptions` is typed as a `ParserOptions` object, TS doesn't discount the possibility of its `plugins` |
| 49 | + // property being undefined, even though it is, in fact, very clearly defined - hence the empty array. |
| 50 | + plugins: [...(jsxOptions.plugins || []), 'typescript'] as babel.ParserPlugin[], |
| 51 | +}; |
| 52 | + |
| 53 | +/** |
| 54 | + * Create either a jsx or tsx parser to be used by `jscodeshift`. |
| 55 | + * |
| 56 | + * @param type Either 'jsx' or 'tsx' |
| 57 | + * @returns An object with the appropriate `parse` method. |
| 58 | + */ |
| 59 | +export function makeParser(type: 'jsx' | 'tsx'): Parser { |
| 60 | + const options = type === 'jsx' ? jsxOptions : tsxOptions; |
| 61 | + return { |
| 62 | + parse: code => babel.parse(code, options), |
| 63 | + }; |
| 64 | +} |
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