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Bash-like brace expansion, implemented in JavaScript. Safer than other brace expansion libs, with complete support for the Bash 4.3 braces specification, without sacrificing speed.
Please consider following this project's author, Jon Schlinkert, and consider starring the project to show your :heart: and support.
Install with npm:
$ npm install --save braces
See the changelog for details.
Brace patterns make globs more powerful by adding the ability to match specific ranges and sequences of characters.
a/{b,c}/d
=> ['a/b/d', 'a/c/d']
{01..03}
=> ['01', '02', '03']
{2..10..2}
=> ['2', '4', '6', '8', '10']
The main export is a function that takes one or more brace patterns
and options
.
const braces = require('braces');
// braces(patterns[, options]);
console.log(braces(['{01..05}', '{a..e}']));
//=> ['(0[1-5])', '([a-e])']
console.log(braces(['{01..05}', '{a..e}'], { expand: true }));
//=> ['01', '02', '03', '04', '05', 'a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e']
By default, brace patterns are compiled into strings that are optimized for creating regular expressions and matching.
Compiled
console.log(braces('a/{x,y,z}/b'));
//=> ['a/(x|y|z)/b']
console.log(braces(['a/{01..20}/b', 'a/{1..5}/b']));
//=> [ 'a/(0[1-9]|1[0-9]|20)/b', 'a/([1-5])/b' ]
Expanded
Enable brace expansion by setting the expand
option to true, or by using braces.expand() (returns an array similar to what you'd expect from Bash, or echo {1..5}
, or minimatch):
console.log(braces('a/{x,y,z}/b', { expand: true }));
//=> ['a/x/b', 'a/y/b', 'a/z/b']
console.log(braces.expand('{01..10}'));
//=> ['01','02','03','04','05','06','07','08','09','10']
Expand lists (like Bash "sets"):
console.log(braces('a/{foo,bar,baz}/*.js'));
//=> ['a/(foo|bar|baz)/*.js']
console.log(braces.expand('a/{foo,bar,baz}/*.js'));
//=> ['a/foo/*.js', 'a/bar/*.js', 'a/baz/*.js']
Expand ranges of characters (like Bash "sequences"):
console.log(braces.expand('{1..3}')); // ['1', '2', '3']
console.log(braces.expand('a/{1..3}/b')); // ['a/1/b', 'a/2/b', 'a/3/b']
console.log(braces('{a..c}', { expand: true })); // ['a', 'b', 'c']
console.log(braces('foo/{a..c}', { expand: true })); // ['foo/a', 'foo/b', 'foo/c']
// supports zero-padded ranges
console.log(braces('a/{01..03}/b')); //=> ['a/(0[1-3])/b']
console.log(braces('a/{001..300}/b')); //=> ['a/(0{2}[1-9]|0[1-9][0-9]|[12][0-9]{2}|300)/b']
See fill-range for all available range-expansion options.
Steps, or increments, may be used with ranges:
console.log(braces.expand('{2..10..2}'));
//=> ['2', '4', '6', '8', '10']
console.log(braces('{2..10..2}'));
//=> ['(2|4|6|8|10)']
When the .optimize method is used, or options.optimize is set to true, sequences are passed to to-regex-range for expansion.
Brace patterns may be nested. The results of each expanded string are not sorted, and left to right order is preserved.
"Expanded" braces
console.log(braces.expand('a{b,c,/{x,y}}/e'));
//=> ['ab/e', 'ac/e', 'a/x/e', 'a/y/e']
console.log(braces.expand('a/{x,{1..5},y}/c'));
//=> ['a/x/c', 'a/1/c', 'a/2/c', 'a/3/c', 'a/4/c', 'a/5/c', 'a/y/c']
"Optimized" braces
console.log(braces('a{b,c,/{x,y}}/e'));
//=> ['a(b|c|/(x|y))/e']
console.log(braces('a/{x,{1..5},y}/c'));
//=> ['a/(x|([1-5])|y)/c']
Escaping braces
A brace pattern will not be expanded or evaluted if either the opening or closing brace is escaped:
console.log(braces.expand('a\\{d,c,b}e'));
//=> ['a{d,c,b}e']
console.log(braces.expand('a{d,c,b\\}e'));
//=> ['a{d,c,b}e']
Escaping commas
Commas inside braces may also be escaped:
console.log(braces.expand('a{b\\,c}d'));
//=> ['a{b,c}d']
console.log(braces.expand('a{d\\,c,b}e'));
//=> ['ad,ce', 'abe']
Single items
Following bash conventions, a brace pattern is also not expanded when it contains a single character:
console.log(braces.expand('a{b}c'));
//=> ['a{b}c']
Type: Number
Default: 65,536
Description: Limit the length of the input string. Useful when the input string is generated or your application allows users to pass a string, et cetera.
console.log(braces('a/{b,c}/d', { maxLength: 3 })); //=> throws an error
Type: Boolean
Default: undefined
Description: Generate an "expanded" brace pattern (alternatively you can use the braces.expand()
method, which does the same thing).
console.log(braces('a/{b,c}/d', { expand: true }));
//=> [ 'a/b/d', 'a/c/d' ]
Type: Boolean
Default: undefined
Description: Remove duplicates from the returned array.
Type: Number
Default: 1000
Description: To prevent malicious patterns from being passed by users, an error is thrown when braces.expand()
is used or options.expand
is true and the generated range will exceed the rangeLimit
.
You can customize options.rangeLimit
or set it to Inifinity
to disable this altogether.
Examples
// pattern exceeds the "rangeLimit", so it's optimized automatically
console.log(braces.expand('{1..1000}'));
//=> ['([1-9]|[1-9][0-9]{1,2}|1000)']
// pattern does not exceed "rangeLimit", so it's NOT optimized
console.log(braces.expand('{1..100}'));
//=> ['1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9', '10', '11', '12', '13', '14', '15', '16', '17', '18', '19', '20', '21', '22', '23', '24', '25', '26', '27', '28', '29', '30', '31', '32', '33', '34', '35', '36', '37', '38', '39', '40', '41', '42', '43', '44', '45', '46', '47', '48', '49', '50', '51', '52', '53', '54', '55', '56', '57', '58', '59', '60', '61', '62', '63', '64', '65', '66', '67', '68', '69', '70', '71', '72', '73', '74', '75', '76', '77', '78', '79', '80', '81', '82', '83', '84', '85', '86', '87', '88', '89', '90', '91', '92', '93', '94', '95', '96', '97', '98', '99', '100']
Type: Function
Default: undefined
Description: Customize range expansion.
Example: Transforming non-numeric values
const alpha = braces.expand('x/{a..e}/y', {
transform(value, index) {
// When non-numeric values are passed, "value" is a character code.
return 'foo/' + String.fromCharCode(value) + '-' + index;
}
});
console.log(alpha);
//=> [ 'x/foo/a-0/y', 'x/foo/b-1/y', 'x/foo/c-2/y', 'x/foo/d-3/y', 'x/foo/e-4/y' ]
Example: Transforming numeric values
const numeric = braces.expand('{1..5}', {
transform(value) {
// when numeric values are passed, "value" is a number
return 'foo/' + value * 2;
}
});
console.log(numeric);
//=> [ 'foo/2', 'foo/4', 'foo/6', 'foo/8', 'foo/10' ]
Type: Boolean
Default: undefined
Description: In regular expressions, quanitifiers can be used to specify how many times a token can be repeated. For example, a{1,3}
will match the letter a
one to three times.
Unfortunately, regex quantifiers happen to share the same syntax as Bash lists
The quantifiers
option tells braces to detect when regex quantifiers are defined in the given pattern, and not to try to expand them as lists.
Examples
const braces = require('braces');
console.log(braces('a/b{1,3}/{x,y,z}'));
//=> [ 'a/b(1|3)/(x|y|z)' ]
console.log(braces('a/b{1,3}/{x,y,z}', {quantifiers: true}));
//=> [ 'a/b{1,3}/(x|y|z)' ]
console.log(braces('a/b{1,3}/{x,y,z}', {quantifiers: true, expand: true}));
//=> [ 'a/b{1,3}/x', 'a/b{1,3}/y', 'a/b{1,3}/z' ]
Type: Boolean
Default: undefined
Description: Strip backslashes that were used for escaping from the result.
Brace expansion is a type of parameter expansion that was made popular by unix shells for generating lists of strings, as well as regex-like matching when used alongside wildcards (globs).
In addition to "expansion", braces are also used for matching. In other words:
Braces is not only screaming fast, it's also more accurate the other brace expansion libraries.
Fortunately there is a solution to the "brace bomb" problem: don't expand brace patterns into an array when they're used for matching.
Instead, convert the pattern into an optimized regular expression. This is easier said than done, and braces is the only library that does this currently.
The proof is in the numbers
Minimatch gets exponentially slower as patterns increase in complexity, braces does not. The following results were generated using braces()
and minimatch.braceExpand()
, respectively.
Pattern | braces | [minimatch][] |
---|---|---|
{1..9007199254740991} [^1] |
298 B (5ms 459μs) |
N/A (freezes) |
{1..1000000000000000} |
41 B (1ms 15μs) |
N/A (freezes) |
{1..100000000000000} |
40 B (890μs) |
N/A (freezes) |
{1..10000000000000} |
39 B (2ms 49μs) |
N/A (freezes) |
{1..1000000000000} |
38 B (608μs) |
N/A (freezes) |
{1..100000000000} |
37 B (397μs) |
N/A (freezes) |
{1..10000000000} |
35 B (983μs) |
N/A (freezes) |
{1..1000000000} |
34 B (798μs) |
N/A (freezes) |
{1..100000000} |
33 B (733μs) |
N/A (freezes) |
{1..10000000} |
32 B (5ms 632μs) |
78.89 MB (16s 388ms 569μs) |
{1..1000000} |
31 B (1ms 381μs) |
6.89 MB (1s 496ms 887μs) |
{1..100000} |
30 B (950μs) |
588.89 kB (146ms 921μs) |
{1..10000} |
29 B (1ms 114μs) |
48.89 kB (14ms 187μs) |
{1..1000} |
28 B (760μs) |
3.89 kB (1ms 453μs) |
{1..100} |
22 B (345μs) |
291 B (196μs) |
{1..10} |
10 B (533μs) |
20 B (37μs) |
{1..3} |
7 B (190μs) |
5 B (27μs) |
When you need expansion, braces is still much faster.
(the following results were generated using braces.expand()
and minimatch.braceExpand()
, respectively)
Pattern | braces | [minimatch][] |
---|---|---|
{1..10000000} |
78.89 MB (2s 698ms 642μs) |
78.89 MB (18s 601ms 974μs) |
{1..1000000} |
6.89 MB (458ms 576μs) |
6.89 MB (1s 491ms 621μs) |
{1..100000} |
588.89 kB (20ms 728μs) |
588.89 kB (156ms 919μs) |
{1..10000} |
48.89 kB (2ms 202μs) |
48.89 kB (13ms 641μs) |
{1..1000} |
3.89 kB (1ms 796μs) |
3.89 kB (1ms 958μs) |
{1..100} |
291 B (424μs) |
291 B (211μs) |
{1..10} |
20 B (487μs) |
20 B (72μs) |
{1..3} |
5 B (166μs) |
5 B (27μs) |
If you'd like to run these comparisons yourself, see test/support/generate.js.
Install dev dependencies:
npm i -d && npm benchmark
Braces is more accurate, without sacrificing performance.
# range (expanded)
braces x 29,040 ops/sec ±3.69% (91 runs sampled))
minimatch x 4,735 ops/sec ±1.28% (90 runs sampled)
# range (optimized for regex)
braces x 382,878 ops/sec ±0.56% (94 runs sampled)
minimatch x 1,040 ops/sec ±0.44% (93 runs sampled)
# nested ranges (expanded)
braces x 19,744 ops/sec ±2.27% (92 runs sampled))
minimatch x 4,579 ops/sec ±0.50% (93 runs sampled)
# nested ranges (optimized for regex)
braces x 246,019 ops/sec ±2.02% (93 runs sampled)
minimatch x 1,028 ops/sec ±0.39% (94 runs sampled)
# set (expanded)
braces x 138,641 ops/sec ±0.53% (95 runs sampled)
minimatch x 219,582 ops/sec ±0.98% (94 runs sampled)
# set (optimized for regex)
braces x 388,408 ops/sec ±0.41% (95 runs sampled)
minimatch x 44,724 ops/sec ±0.91% (89 runs sampled)
# nested sets (expanded)
braces x 84,966 ops/sec ±0.48% (94 runs sampled)
minimatch x 140,720 ops/sec ±0.37% (95 runs sampled)
# nested sets (optimized for regex)
braces x 263,340 ops/sec ±2.06% (92 runs sampled)
minimatch x 28,714 ops/sec ±0.40% (90 runs sampled)
| Commits | Contributor |
| --- | --- |
| 197 | jonschlinkert |
| 4 | doowb |
| 1 | es128 |
| 1 | eush77 |
| 1 | hemanth |
| 1 | wtgtybhertgeghgtwtg |
Jon Schlinkert
Copyright © 2019, Jon Schlinkert. Released under the MIT License.
This file was generated by verb-generate-readme, v0.8.0, on April 08, 2019.