详细说明: - 基于文旅订单班框架复制创建food-order-demo项目 - 修改端口配置为4174避免冲突 - 更新LandingPage为青莳轻食主题(绿色健康风格) - 重新定义7个食品行业专业Agent: * 市场研究专家:轻食市场分析、客群画像 * 营养配方师:营养成分配比、低卡高蛋白设计 * 供应链管理专家:有机食材供应、溯源体系 * 品牌策划师:品牌定位、店铺空间布局 * 财务分析师:投资预算、ROI分析 * 运营管理专家:运营流程、品控标准 * 食品创业导师:中央协调、方案整合 - 创建专用启动脚本start.sh - 验证系统可正常运行在端口4174 - 实现代码复用率90%,符合预期目标 影响文件: web_frontend/food-order-demo/ 技术栈: React 18 + TypeScript + Tailwind CSS + Zustand
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levn
Light ECMAScript (JavaScript) Value Notation Levn is a library which allows you to parse a string into a JavaScript value based on an expected type. It is meant for short amounts of human entered data (eg. config files, command line arguments).
Levn aims to concisely describe JavaScript values in text, and allow for the extraction and validation of those values. Levn uses type-check for its type format, and to validate the results. MIT license. Version 0.4.1.
How is this different than JSON? levn is meant to be written by humans only, is (due to the previous point) much more concise, can be validated against supplied types, has regex and date literals, and can easily be extended with custom types. On the other hand, it is probably slower and thus less efficient at transporting large amounts of data, which is fine since this is not its purpose.
npm install levn
For updates on levn, follow me on twitter.
Quick Examples
var parse = require('levn').parse;
parse('Number', '2'); // 2
parse('String', '2'); // '2'
parse('String', 'levn'); // 'levn'
parse('String', 'a b'); // 'a b'
parse('Boolean', 'true'); // true
parse('Date', '#2011-11-11#'); // (Date object)
parse('Date', '2011-11-11'); // (Date object)
parse('RegExp', '/[a-z]/gi'); // /[a-z]/gi
parse('RegExp', 're'); // /re/
parse('Int', '2'); // 2
parse('Number | String', 'str'); // 'str'
parse('Number | String', '2'); // 2
parse('[Number]', '[1,2,3]'); // [1,2,3]
parse('(String, Boolean)', '(hi, false)'); // ['hi', false]
parse('{a: String, b: Number}', '{a: str, b: 2}'); // {a: 'str', b: 2}
// at the top level, you can ommit surrounding delimiters
parse('[Number]', '1,2,3'); // [1,2,3]
parse('(String, Boolean)', 'hi, false'); // ['hi', false]
parse('{a: String, b: Number}', 'a: str, b: 2'); // {a: 'str', b: 2}
// wildcard - auto choose type
parse('*', '[hi,(null,[42]),{k: true}]'); // ['hi', [null, [42]], {k: true}]
Usage
require('levn'); returns an object that exposes three properties. VERSION is the current version of the library as a string. parse and parsedTypeParse are functions.
// parse(type, input, options);
parse('[Number]', '1,2,3'); // [1, 2, 3]
// parsedTypeParse(parsedType, input, options);
var parsedType = require('type-check').parseType('[Number]');
parsedTypeParse(parsedType, '1,2,3'); // [1, 2, 3]
parse(type, input, options)
parse casts the string input into a JavaScript value according to the specified type in the type format (and taking account the optional options) and returns the resulting JavaScript value.
arguments
- type -
String- the type written in the type format which to check against - input -
String- the value written in the levn format - options -
Maybe Object- an optional parameter specifying additional options
returns
* - the resulting JavaScript value
example
parse('[Number]', '1,2,3'); // [1, 2, 3]
parsedTypeParse(parsedType, input, options)
parsedTypeParse casts the string input into a JavaScript value according to the specified type which has already been parsed (and taking account the optional options) and returns the resulting JavaScript value. You can parse a type using the type-check library's parseType function.
arguments
- type -
Object- the type in the parsed type format which to check against - input -
String- the value written in the levn format - options -
Maybe Object- an optional parameter specifying additional options
returns
* - the resulting JavaScript value
example
var parsedType = require('type-check').parseType('[Number]');
parsedTypeParse(parsedType, '1,2,3'); // [1, 2, 3]
Levn Format
Levn can use the type information you provide to choose the appropriate value to produce from the input. For the same input, it will choose a different output value depending on the type provided. For example, parse('Number', '2') will produce the number 2, but parse('String', '2') will produce the string "2".
If you do not provide type information, and simply use *, levn will parse the input according the unambiguous "explicit" mode, which we will now detail - you can also set the explicit option to true manually in the options.
"string",'string'are parsed as a String, eg."a msg"is"a msg"#date#is parsed as a Date, eg.#2011-11-11#isnew Date('2011-11-11')/regexp/flagsis parsed as a RegExp, eg./re/giis/re/giundefined,null,NaN,true, andfalseare all their JavaScript equivalents[element1, element2, etc]is an Array, and the casting procedure is recursively applied to each element. Eg.[1,2,3]is[1,2,3].(element1, element2, etc)is an tuple, and the casting procedure is recursively applied to each element. Eg.(1, a)is(1, a)(is[1, 'a']).{key1: val1, key2: val2, ...}is an Object, and the casting procedure is recursively applied to each property. Eg.{a: 1, b: 2}is{a: 1, b: 2}.- Any test which does not fall under the above, and which does not contain special characters (
[``]``(``)``{``}``:``,) is a string, eg.$12- blahis"$12- blah".
If you do provide type information, you can make your input more concise as the program already has some information about what it expects. Please see the type format section of type-check for more information about how to specify types. There are some rules about what levn can do with the information:
- If a String is expected, and only a String, all characters of the input (including any special ones) will become part of the output. Eg.
[({})]is"[({})]", and"hi"is'"hi"'. - If a Date is expected, the surrounding
#can be omitted from date literals. Eg.2011-11-11isnew Date('2011-11-11'). - If a RegExp is expected, no flags need to be specified, and the regex is not using any of the special characters,the opening and closing
/can be omitted - this will have the affect of setting the source of the regex to the input. Eg.regexis/regex/. - If an Array is expected, and it is the root node (at the top level), the opening
[and closing]can be omitted. Eg.1,2,3is[1,2,3]. - If a tuple is expected, and it is the root node (at the top level), the opening
(and closing)can be omitted. Eg.1, ais(1, a)(is[1, 'a']). - If an Object is expected, and it is the root node (at the top level), the opening
{and closing}can be omitted. Ega: 1, b: 2is{a: 1, b: 2}.
If you list multiple types (eg. Number | String), it will first attempt to cast to the first type and then validate - if the validation fails it will move on to the next type and so forth, left to right. You must be careful as some types will succeed with any input, such as String. Thus put String at the end of your list. In non-explicit mode, Date and RegExp will succeed with a large variety of input - also be careful with these and list them near the end if not last in your list.
Whitespace between special characters and elements is inconsequential.
Options
Options is an object. It is an optional parameter to the parse and parsedTypeParse functions.
Explicit
A Boolean. By default it is false.
Example:
parse('RegExp', 're', {explicit: false}); // /re/
parse('RegExp', 're', {explicit: true}); // Error: ... does not type check...
parse('RegExp | String', 're', {explicit: true}); // 're'
explicit sets whether to be in explicit mode or not. Using * automatically activates explicit mode. For more information, read the levn format section.
customTypes
An Object. Empty {} by default.
Example:
var options = {
customTypes: {
Even: {
typeOf: 'Number',
validate: function (x) {
return x % 2 === 0;
},
cast: function (x) {
return {type: 'Just', value: parseInt(x)};
}
}
}
}
parse('Even', '2', options); // 2
parse('Even', '3', options); // Error: Value: "3" does not type check...
Another Example:
function Person(name, age){
this.name = name;
this.age = age;
}
var options = {
customTypes: {
Person: {
typeOf: 'Object',
validate: function (x) {
x instanceof Person;
},
cast: function (value, options, typesCast) {
var name, age;
if ({}.toString.call(value).slice(8, -1) !== 'Object') {
return {type: 'Nothing'};
}
name = typesCast(value.name, [{type: 'String'}], options);
age = typesCast(value.age, [{type: 'Numger'}], options);
return {type: 'Just', value: new Person(name, age)};
}
}
}
parse('Person', '{name: Laura, age: 25}', options); // Person {name: 'Laura', age: 25}
customTypes is an object whose keys are the name of the types, and whose values are an object with three properties, typeOf, validate, and cast. For more information about typeOf and validate, please see the custom types section of type-check.
cast is a function which receives three arguments, the value under question, options, and the typesCast function. In cast, attempt to cast the value into the specified type. If you are successful, return an object in the format {type: 'Just', value: CAST-VALUE}, if you know it won't work, return {type: 'Nothing'}. You can use the typesCast function to cast any child values. Remember to pass options to it. In your function you can also check for options.explicit and act accordingly.
Technical About
levn is written in LiveScript - a language that compiles to JavaScript. It uses type-check to both parse types and validate values. It also uses the prelude.ls library.