TS PEG.js is a TS code generation plugin for peggy.
Installs ts-pegjs + peggy
$ npm install ts-pegjs
In Node.js, require both the peggy parser generator and the ts-pegjs plugin:
var peggy = require('peggy');
var tspegjs = require('ts-pegjs');To generate a TS parser, pass to pegjs.generate ts-pegjs plugin and your grammar:
var parser = pegjs.generate("start = ('a' / 'b')+", {
    output: 'source',
    format: 'commonjs',
    plugins: [tspegjs],
    tspegjs: {
        customHeader: "// import lib\nimport { Lib } from 'mylib';"
    }
});The method will return source code of generated parser as a string.
Supported options of pegjs.generate:
- cache— if- true, makes the parser cache results, avoiding exponential parsing time in pathological cases but making the parser slower (default:- false). This is strongly recommended for big grammars (like javascript.pegjs or css.pegjs in example folder)
- allowedStartRules— rules the parser will be allowed to start parsing from (default: the first rule in the grammar)
Note: Options in CLI mode are written in POSIX (long names as kebab-case) convention e.g. --custom-header but with camelcase on JavaScript e.g. customHeader.
- customHeader— A string or an array of strings which are a valid TS code to be injected on the header of the output file. E.g. provides a convenient place for adding library imports.
- customHeaderFile— A header file to include.
- errorName— The name of the exported internal error class to override. The default value from version 3.0.0 is- PeggySyntaxError. Previous one was- SyntaxError.
- returnTypes— An object containing rule names as keys and a valid TS return type as string.
- skipTypeComputation— Boolean. If- true,- ts-pegjswill not try to use TS to infer types based on your grammar rules.
- onlyGenerateGrammarTypes— Boolean. If- true, only types for your grammar rules (and no parser) will be generated. Cannot be used with- skipTypeComputation.
- doNotCamelCaseTypes— Boolean. By default type names for grammar rules are converted to CamelCase. If- true, this conversion is not done and type names will match the casing of your grammar rules.
Sample usage:
peggy --plugin ./src/tspegjs -o examples/arithmetics.ts --cache examples/arithmetics.pegjs
(Note ./src/tspegjs is the path to tspegjs.ts in the project. If you installed ts-pegjs using npm, it should probably be ./node_modules/ts-pegjs/src/tspegjs.)
It will generarate the parser in the TS flavour.
If you need to pass specific plugin options you can use the option --extra-options-file provided by pegjs and pass it a filename (e.g. pegconfig.json) containing specific options like the following JSON sample:
peggy --plugin ./src/tspegjs --extra-options-file pegconfig.json -o examples/arithmetics.ts --cache examples/arithmetics.pegjs
{
    "tspegjs": {
        "customHeader": "// import lib\nimport { Lib } from 'mylib';"
    },
    "returnTypes": {
        "Integer": "number",
        "Expression": "number",
    }
}For rules not listed in
returnTypesobjectanytype is declared by default.
Make sure to pass any additional CLI options, like
--extra-options-filebefore the parameter-oas these will otherwise be treated as arguments to that one.
- 
Save parser generated by pegjs.generateto a file or use the one generated from the CLI tool.
- 
In client TS code: 
import { PeggySyntaxError, parse } from './arithmetics';
try {
    const sampleOutput = parse('my sample...');
} catch (ex: PeggySyntaxError) {
    // Handle parsing error
    // [...]
}Thanks to:
- David Majda for creating pegjs
- Elantcev Mikhail for providing the pegjs PHP plugin, inspiration on this one.
(c) 2017-2023, Pedro J. Molina at metadev.pro
