alex wrapper to easily integrate with Visual Studio Code language server
const alexVSCode = require('alex-vscode');
const {TextDocuments, createConnection} = require('vscode-languageserver');
const connection = createConnection(process.stdin, process.stdout);
const documents = new TextDocuments();
documents.onDidChangeContent(event => {
event.document.getText(); //=> 'He is a video game maniac.'
event.document.uri; //=> 'file:///Users/user/foo.txt'
alexVSCode({event.document});
/* =>
[
{
message: '`He` may be insensitive, use `They`, `It` instead',
range: {
start: {
character: 0,
line: 0
},
end: {
character: 2,
line: 0
}
},
severity: 2
},
{
message: '`maniac` may be insensitive, use `fanatic`, `zealot`, `enthusiast` instead',
range: {
end: {
character: 25,
line: 0
},
start: {
character: 19,
line: 0
}
},
severity: 1
}
]
*/
});
documents.listen(connection);
connection.listen();
npm install alex-vscode
const alexVSCode = require('alex-vscode');
textDocument: TextDocument
Return: Array<Diagnostic>
(VS Code Diagnostics)
It checks a given document with alex and returns warnings as an array of Visual Studio Code compatible diagnostic objects.
When the document is a markdown file, it parses the text as markdown.
document.getText(); //=> '```\nHe is a video game maniac.\n```\n'
document.uri; //=> 'file:///Users/user/foo.markdown'
alexVSCode(document); //=> []
Copyright (c) 2015 - 2018 Shinnosuke Watanabe
Licensed under the MIT License.