Helper package that can parse a line from an ink story into tokens that can be used to add additional metadata. See apps/example
in the root directory for an example of how it's used.
import { parseLineIntoTokens } from "@a-morphous/frontispiece-line-parser" let tokens = parseLineIntoTokens(text) for (let t of tokens) { switch (t.type) { case "text": str += t.text break case "tag": if (t.isClosingTag) { str += `</span>` } else { str += `<span class="ink-${t.param}">` } break ... } }
line-parser
will transform the string into a flat array of tokens; besides text tokens, most of them will have an opening token and closing token to mark tags. It's then the developer's responsibility to transform those tokens into the final line.
Any text that doesn't match any other markup is represented as a TextToken
.
Tags can be used to make custom HTML or other markup, and have the following syntax:
<<tagname>>Content of the tag <</tagname>>
You can also have <<tag>>generic<</>> endings, which will nest them in order.
Tags will produce TagTokens
:
type TagToken = { type: 'tag' param: string isClosingTag?: boolean // set to true if it's used as a closing tag. }
Links are represented similarly to inline links in Markdown, and can be used to create a regular external link, or make any other note in the text that could be represented by some metadata.
[This is a link](target or url or link metadata)
They produce a single LinkToken
:
export type LinkToken = { type: 'link' text: string target: string }
Link tokens don't have a closing tag; the text in them is the text rendered inside of the link body.
Notes are exactly like links, except they use Markdown's image syntax, with a !
before the rest of the syntax:
![This is a note](and a possible target).
They produce a NoteToken
, and are distinct from links only to allow for different types of functionality.