Gathering detailed insights and metrics for linez
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for linez
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for linez
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for linez
npm install linez
Module System
Min. Node Version
Typescript Support
Node Version
NPM Version
4 Stars
123 Commits
2 Forks
2 Watching
1 Branches
4 Contributors
Updated on 02 Mar 2017
TypeScript (100%)
Cumulative downloads
Total Downloads
Last day
12.4%
3,144
Compared to previous day
Last week
15.3%
18,417
Compared to previous week
Last month
13.5%
68,890
Compared to previous month
Last year
-31.7%
870,136
Compared to previous year
Parses lines from text, preserving line numbers, offsets and line endings.
1$ npm install linez
1import * as linez from 'linez';
1import linez from 'linez';
1var linez = require('linez');
By default, linez uses /\r?\n/g
as the regular expression to detect newline character sequences and split lines. This regular expression is tuned for performance and only covers the most common newline types (i.e., \n
and \r\n
). If you have need for more newline character sequences, you can configure linez with the configure
method.
1linez.configure({ 2 newlines: ['\n', '\r\n', '\r', '\u000B'] 3});
Setting this property will automatically create a piped regular expression for you and use it in any future linez()
calls. You can make up your own newlines if you want. Linez doesn't care one way or the other.
1linez.configure({ 2 newlines: ['foo', 'bar'] 3});
This would be converted into /(foo|bar)/g
. Newlines are just strings. They can be anything. There are, however, some known newline character sequences. Should you need them, refer to the following table:
String | Unicode | Name |
---|---|---|
\n | U+000A | Line feed |
\r\n | U+000D, U+000A | Carriage Return + Line Feed |
\r | U+000D | Carriage Return |
\u000B | U+000B | Vertical Tab |
\u000C | U+000C | Form Feed |
\u0085 | U+0085 | Next Line |
\u2028 | U+2028 | Line Separator |
\u2029 | U+2029 | Paragraph Separator |
Also referred to as BOM signatures, these are the bytes at the beginning of a file that indicating the encoding in which the file is written. Currently, linez only reads BOMs to detect the encoding and does not take into account the contents of the file.
If linez detects an unsupported BOM, an error will be thrown, indicating that decoding the detected charset is not supported.
By default, the document will attempt to be decoded as utf8. This is the default behavior of the Node API's conversion from buffers into strings.
Configures linez to use the supplied options. Currently, only the newlines property is available, where you can specify any number of newline character sequences.
1linez.configure({ 2 newlines: ['\n', '\r\n', '\r', '\u000B'] 3});
Resets the configuration to the default settings, using /\r?\n/g
as the newlines regular expression.
1constructor(public lines: Line[]);
Calling the toString()
method converts the document's lines into a string, discarding information about line numbers and offsets.
1interface Line { 2 offset: number; 3 number: number; 4 text: string; 5 ending: string; 6}
1interface Options { 2 newlines?: string[]; 3}
Parses text into a Document
.
The specs show some great usage examples.
1var lines = linez('foo\nbar\nbaz').lines; 2lines[1].offset; // 4 3lines[1].number; // 2 4lines[1].text; // bar 5lines[1].ending; // \n
Note: You can also pass-in a Buffer.
Released under the MIT license.
No vulnerabilities found.
Reason
no binaries found in the repo
Reason
0 existing vulnerabilities detected
Reason
Found 4/22 approved changesets -- score normalized to 1
Reason
0 commit(s) and 0 issue activity found in the last 90 days -- score normalized to 0
Reason
no effort to earn an OpenSSF best practices badge detected
Reason
license file not detected
Details
Reason
security policy file not detected
Details
Reason
project is not fuzzed
Details
Reason
SAST tool is not run on all commits -- score normalized to 0
Details
Score
Last Scanned on 2024-11-25
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