# How to write the transformation module

The transform is simply a module that exports a function of the form:

module.exports = function(fileInfo, api, options) {
  // transform `fileInfo.source` here
  // ...
  // return changed source
  return source;
};
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Here is an example of transformation module:

✗ cat hello-jscodeshift.js 
/**
 * This replaces every occurrence of variable "foo".
 */
module.exports = function (fileInfo, api, options) {
  return api
    .jscodeshift(fileInfo.source)
    .findVariableDeclarators("foo")
    .renameTo("bar")
    .toSource();
};
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As of v0.6.1, this module can also be written in TypeScript.

# The Arguments of the Exported Function

# Argument fileInfo

Holds information about the currently processed file.

Property Description
path File path
source File content

# Argument api

This object exposes the jscodeshift library and helper functions from the runner.

Property Description
jscodeshift A reference to the jscodeshift library
stats A function to collect statistics during --dry runs
report Prints the passed string to stdout

jscodeshift is a reference to the wrapper around recast and provides a jQuery-like API to navigate and transform the AST.

stats is a function that only works when the --dry options is set. It accepts a string, and will simply count how often it was called with that value.

At the end, the CLI will report those values. This can be useful while developing the transform, e.g. to find out how often a certain construct appears in the source(s).

report allows you do print arbitrary strings to stdout. This can be useful when other tools consume the output of jscodeshift. The reason to not directly use process.stdout in transform code is to avoid mangled output when many files are processed.

# Argument options

Contains all options that have been passed to runner. This allows you to pass additional options to the transform. For example, if the CLI is called with

$ jscodeshift -t myTransforms fileA fileB --foo=bar
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options would contain {foo: 'bar'}.

# Return value

The return value of the function determines the status of the transformation:

  • If a string is returned and it is different from passed source, the transform is considered to be successful.
  • If a string is returned but it's the same as the source, the transform is considered to be unsuccessful.
  • If nothing is returned, the file is not supposed to be transformed (which is ok).

The CLI provides a summary of the transformation at the end. You can get more detailed information by setting the -v option to 1 or 2.

You can collect even more stats via the stats function as explained above.

# Parser

The transform can let jscodeshift know with which parser to parse the source files (and features like templates).

To do that, the transform module can export parser, which can either be one of the strings "babel", "babylon", "flow", "ts", or "tsx", or it can be a parser object that is compatible with recast.

For example:

module.exports.parser = 'flow'; // use the flow parser
// or
module.exports.parser = {
  parse: function(source) {
    // return estree compatible AST
  },
};
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# Example output

$ jscodeshift -t myTransform.js src
Processing 10 files...
Spawning 2 workers with 5 files each...
All workers done.
Results: 0 errors 2 unmodified 3 skipped 5 ok
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# References

See the section references about AST transformations

Last Updated: 10 months ago