openly-raml-parser
v0.8.8
Published
A RAML parser based on PyYAML written in CoffeScript and available for use as NodeJs module or in-browser.
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RAML Parser
This project contains a RAML parser capable (at this moment) to parser v0.8 version of the RAML specification. The parser is written in CoffeeScript and its capable of running inside NodeJS as well as in-browser.
Versioning
The RAML parser is versioned in the following manner:
x.y.z
in which x.y denotes the version of the RAML specification and z is the version of the parser.
So 0.1.2 is the 2nd revision of the parser for the 0.1 version of the RAML specification.
Usage for NodeJS
Load
Loading a RAML file is as easy as follows:
var raml = require('raml-parser');
raml.loadFile('myAPI.raml').then( function(data) {
console.log(data);
}, function(error) {
console.log('Error parsing: ' + error);
});
you can also alternatively load from a string containing the api definition:
var raml = require('raml-parser');
var definition = [
'---',
'title: MyApi',
'baseUri: http://myapi.com',
'/:',
' name: Root'
].join('\n');
raml.load(definition).then( function(data) {
console.log(data);
}, function(error) {
console.log('Error parsing: ' + error);
});
Abstract Syntax Tree
Generating an AST from a RAML file is as easy as follows:
var raml = require('raml-parser');
var myAPI;
raml.composeFile('myAPI.raml').then( function(rootNode) {
console.log('Root Node: ' + rootNode)
}, function(error) {
console.log('Error parsing: ' + error);
});
you can also alternatively generate an AST from a string containing the api definition:
var raml = require('raml-parser');
var definition = [
'---',
'title: MyApi',
'baseUri: http://myapi.com',
'/:',
' name: Root'
].join('\n');
raml.compose(definition).then( function(rootNode) {
console.log('Root Node: ' + rootNode)
}, function(error) {
console.log('Error parsing: ' + error);
});
Usage for In-Browser
Using the RAML parser from inside the browser requires the user to actually include the RAML javascript file in a script tag as follows:
<script src="raml-parser.min.js"></script>
from there on the usage is pretty much the same as NodeJS, the script defines a RAML.Parser object globally which can be used as follows:
RAML.Parser.loadFile('http://localhost:9001/myAPI.raml').then( function(data) {
console.log(data)
}, function(error) {
console.log('Error parsing: ' + error);
});
Notice that the in-browser version can fetch remote API definitions via XHR.