Pipes content of files to a node repl whenever they change to enable a highly interactive coding experience.
Adds keymaps, doc access, vim binding and maps and prints highlighted source of functions right in the repl.
Check out the replpad home page for demos and tutorials.
- watches all
*.js
files insideroot
and all subdirectories and sources a file to the repl once it changes - access core module docs in the repl via the
dox()
function that is added to every core function, i.e.fs.readdir.dox()
- access user module readmes in the repl via the
dox()
function that is added to every module installed via npm, i.e.marked.dox()
- access function's highlighted source code, info on where function was defined (file, linenumber) and function
comments and/or jsdocs where possible via the
src
property that is added to every function, i.e.express.logger.src
- scriptie-talkie support (see
.talk
command) - adds commands and keyboard shortcuts
- vim key bindings
- key map support
- parens matching via match token plugin
- appends code entered in repl back to file via keyboard shortcut or
.append
command - adjusts
__filename
,__dirname
andrequire
to work for the file that is being sourced - ensures sourced code is parsable on a line by line basis before sending to repl by rewriting it
- exposes
module.exports
of last sourced file as$
- exposes the underlying repl as
$repl
in order to allow further customizations
Table of Contents generated with DocToc
- Installation
- Usage
- API
- Commands
- Keyboard Shortcuts
- Smart Append
- Plugins
- Using replpad with the Vim Editor
- Configuring replpad
- Roadmap
npm install -g replpad
replpad [path/to/root]
If path/to/root
is omitted then no files are watched.
Example: replpad .
watches current directory and all sub directories.
You can use replpad inside of your application and specify repl start options:
var replpad = require('replpad');
var repl = replpad({
prompt : 'my-prompt >'
, input : process.stdin
, output : process.stdout
, ignoreUndefined : true
, useColors : true
, useGlobal : true
, terminal : true
});
Some commands were added to the built in repl
commands. Here is a list of all of them:
pad > .help
.append Appends the last entered parsable chunk of code or the last line to the last file that was sourced in the repl
.clear Break, and also clear the local context
.compact [on] Toggles if code is compacted before being sourced to the repl
.depth [2] Sets the depth to which an object is traversed when printed to the repl
.exit Exit the repl
.help Show this list of repl commands
.hidden [off] Set whether hidden properties are included during traversal of an object that is printed to the
repl
.highlight [off] Toggles if syntax highlighted code is printed to the repl before being sourced
.load Load JS from a file into the REPL session
.pack Load your package.json dependencies and devDependencies into the repl context
.save Save all evaluated commands in this REPL session to a file
Note: commands that toggle a setting like .compact
take a second parameter: on|off
. If it is ommitted the state
is toggled, i.e if it was on
it is turned off
and vice versa.
Note: when code is syntax highlighted, it is still followed by the compacted code which is necessary in order to have the repl evaluate it.
You can add commands to the repl in real time via $repl.defineCommand
$repl.define('sayhi', {
help: 'Says hi via .sayhi'
, action: function () { console.log('Hi!') }
})
Ctrl-L
clears the terminalCtrl-D
exits replpadCtrl-A
Appends the last entered parsable chunk of code or the last line to the last file that was sourced in the repl.
When the .append
command or the append keyboard shortcut is executed, replpad
will attempt to find a parsable chunk
of code to append. If the last line is parsable or no parsable chunk is found, it will append the last line.
Example:
Assume we entered:
2 + 3
function foo() {
var a = 2;
return a;
}
The first valid JavaScript are the last 4 lines combined. Therefore the entire function foo
will be appended. This is
makes more sense than appending just }
for instance.
Additionally the code is reformatted with 2 space indents.
Plugins can be enabled/disabled in the lower portion of the replpad config file (default.
The following plugins are available.
If enabled, a subset of vim bindings are added to replpad
via readline-vim.
Consult its readme for available vim bindings.
replpad
allows you to specify keymaps.
imap
is used to map keys in insert mode and nmap
to map keys in normal mode.
// map 'ctrl-t' to 'esc', allowing to switch to normal mode via 'ctrl-t'
$repl.imap('ctrl-t', 'esc');
// go forward in history via 'ctrl-space' in normal mode
$repl.nmap('ctrl-space', 'j')
You can list all registered mappings via: $repl.maps
.
These are handled by readline-vim, so in order to learn more please read this section.
You can also declare mappings to be applied at startup by including them inside the map section of your config file as explained in configuring replpad.
Mappings are limited by what the underlying nodejs readline
supports. Consult this
section for more information.
In general I found that only a few mappings in normal
mode have the desired effect. In insert
mode things are
somewhat better.
If enabled, it will match parens, braces, brackets and quotes by jumping the cursor to the matching token emacs style.
- in order to auto update your file whenever you append a repl line to it, you need to
:set autoread
- in case you are using terminal vim, autoread is not working great, so you should add the WatchFile script to your vim configuration
replpad
is fully configurable.
When launched for the first time it creates a config file at ~/.config/replpad/config.js
. Initially this is a copy of
the default-config, but you can edit it to
change these defaults.
Reading the comments in that file should give you enough information to tweak it.
- more vim bindings
- only pipe part of a file enclosed by
start/stop
comments - pause/resume feeding files via command
- list an object's properties by type (i.e.
Function
,Object
,String
)