Version 2.0.0 (2016-06-19)
- Added: Support for ES2016. In other words, support for the
**
exponentiation
operator.
These are the breaking changes:
'**'.match(jsTokens)
no longer returns ['*', '*']
, but ['**']
.
'**='.match(jsTokens)
no longer returns ['*', '*=']
, but ['**=']
.
Version 1.0.3 (2016-03-27)
- Improved: Made the regex ever so slightly smaller.
- Updated: The readme.
Version 1.0.2 (2015-10-18)
- Improved: Limited npm package contents for a smaller download. Thanks to
@zertosh!
Version 1.0.1 (2015-06-20)
- Fixed: Declared an undeclared variable.
Version 1.0.0 (2015-02-26)
- Changed: Merged the 'operator' and 'punctuation' types into 'punctuator'. That
type is now equivalent to the Punctuator token in the ECMAScript
specification. (Backwards-incompatible change.)
- Fixed: A
-
followed by a number is now correctly matched as a punctuator
followed by a number. It used to be matched as just a number, but there is no
such thing as negative number literals. (Possibly backwards-incompatible
change.)
Version 0.4.1 (2015-02-21)
- Added: Support for the regex
u
flag.
Version 0.4.0 (2015-02-21)
- Improved:
jsTokens.matchToToken
performance.
- Added: Support for octal and binary number literals.
- Added: Support for template strings.
Version 0.3.1 (2015-01-06)
- Fixed: Support for unicode spaces. They used to be allowed in names (which is
very confusing), and some unicode newlines were wrongly allowed in strings and
regexes.
Version 0.3.0 (2014-12-19)
- Changed: The
jsTokens.names
array has been replaced with the
jsTokens.matchToToken
function. The capturing groups of jsTokens
are no
longer part of the public API; instead use said function. See this gist for
an example. (Backwards-incompatible change.)
- Changed: The empty string is now considered an “invalid” token, instead an
“empty” token (its own group). (Backwards-incompatible change.)
- Removed: component support. (Backwards-incompatible change.)
Version 0.2.0 (2014-06-19)
- Changed: Match ES6 function arrows (
=>
) as an operator, instead of its own
category (“functionArrow”), for simplicity. (Backwards-incompatible change.)
- Added: ES6 splats (
...
) are now matched as an operator (instead of three
punctuations). (Backwards-incompatible change.)
Version 0.1.0 (2014-03-08)