# falafel Transform the [ast](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstract_syntax_tree) on a recursive walk. [![browser support](http://ci.testling.com/substack/node-falafel.png)](http://ci.testling.com/substack/node-falafel) [![build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/substack/node-falafel.png)](http://travis-ci.org/substack/node-falafel) This modules uses [acorn](https://npmjs.org/package/acorn) to create an AST from source code. ![falafel döner](http://substack.net/images/falafel.png) # example ## array.js Put a function wrapper around all array literals. ``` js var falafel = require('falafel'); var src = '(' + function () { var xs = [ 1, 2, [ 3, 4 ] ]; var ys = [ 5, 6 ]; console.dir([ xs, ys ]); } + ')()'; var output = falafel(src, function (node) { if (node.type === 'ArrayExpression') { node.update('fn(' + node.source() + ')'); } }); console.log(output); ``` output: ``` (function () { var xs = fn([ 1, 2, fn([ 3, 4 ]) ]); var ys = fn([ 5, 6 ]); console.dir(fn([ xs, ys ])); })() ``` # methods ``` js var falafel = require('falafel') ``` ## falafel(src, opts={}, fn) Transform the string source `src` with the function `fn`, returning a string-like transformed output object. For every node in the ast, `fn(node)` fires. The recursive walk is a pre-traversal, so children get called before their parents. Performing a pre-traversal makes it easier to write nested transforms since transforming parents often requires transforming all its children first. The return value is string-like (it defines `.toString()` and `.inspect()`) so that you can call `node.update()` asynchronously after the function has returned and still capture the output. Instead of passing a `src` you can also use `opts.source`. All of the `opts` will be passed directly to [acorn](https://npmjs.org/package/acorn). ## custom parser You may pass in an instance of acorn to the opts as `opts.parser` to use that version instead of the version of acorn packaged with this library. ```js var acorn = require('acorn-jsx'); falafel(src, {parser: acorn, plugins: { jsx: true }}, function(node) { // this will parse jsx }); ``` # nodes Aside from the regular [esprima](http://esprima.org) data, you can also call some inserted methods on nodes. Aside from updating the current node, you can also reach into sub-nodes to call update functions on children from parent nodes. ## node.source() Return the source for the given node, including any modifications made to children nodes. ## node.update(s) Transform the source for the present node to the string `s`. Note that in `'ForStatement'` node types, there is an existing subnode called `update`. For those nodes all the properties are copied over onto the `node.update()` function. ## node.parent Reference to the parent element or `null` at the root element. # install With [npm](http://npmjs.org) do: ``` npm install falafel ``` # license MIT