| # parse-literals |
| |
| _Because sometimes you literally need to parse template literals._ |
| |
| [](https://www.npmjs.com/package/parse-literals) |
| [](https://travis-ci.com/asyncLiz/parse-literals) |
| [](https://coveralls.io/github/asyncLiz/parse-literals?branch=master) |
| |
| ## Why? |
| |
| Template literals are often used in JavaScript for HTML and CSS. This library allows developers to extract the strings from the literals for post processing, such as minifying or linting. |
| |
| ## Usage |
| |
| ```js |
| import * as pl from 'parse-literals'; |
| // const pl = require('parse-literals'); |
| |
| const templates = pl.parseLiterals(` |
| render() { |
| return html\` |
| <h1>\${"Hello World"}</h1> |
| \`; |
| } |
| `); |
| |
| console.log(templates); |
| // [ |
| // { |
| // "tag": "html", |
| // "parts": [ |
| // { |
| // "text": "\n <h1>", |
| // "start": 30, |
| // "end": 41 |
| // }, |
| // { |
| // "text": "</h1>\n ", |
| // "start": 57, |
| // "end": 67 |
| // } |
| // ] |
| // } |
| // ] |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Supported Source Syntax |
| |
| - JavaScript |
| - TypeScript |