fake-tag

A fake template literal tag to trick syntax highlighters, linters and formatters into action.


Keywords
es6, dummy, fake, template, literal, string, tag, esm, mjs, maintained, node, npm, typescript
License
MIT
Install
npm install fake-tag@2.0.0

Documentation

fake-tag

A fake template literal tag to trick syntax highlighters, linters and formatters into action. Interpolations and escapes are tested.

Installation

For Node.js, to install fake-tag with npm, run:

npm install fake-tag

For Deno and browsers, an example import map:

{
  "imports": {
    "fake-tag": "https://unpkg.com/fake-tag@5.0.0/fakeTag.mjs"
  }
}

Then, import and use the template literal tag fakeTag.

Examples

Tagging a GraphQL SDL string with gql:

import gql from "fake-tag";

const typeDefs = gql`
  "A foo."
  type Foo {
    "The \`Foo\` ID."
    id: ID!
  }
`;

Requirements

Supported runtime environments:

Non Deno projects must configure TypeScript to use types from the ECMAScript modules that have a // @ts-check comment:

Exports

The npm package fake-tag features optimal JavaScript module design. These ECMAScript modules are exported via the package.json field exports:

FAQ

Why not comment tags?

A comment tag looks like this:

const QUERY = /* GraphQL */ `
  {
    foo
  }
`;

They are far superior to a fake tag:

  • No dependency to manage.
  • No inconvenient imports.
  • No bundle size bloat.
  • No runtime overhead.

Unfortunately not all tools support them yet. prettier has since v1.13.0, but eslint-plugin-graphql at v3.1.0 still doesn’t.

Why not String.raw?

This may be temptingly simple:

const gql = String.raw;
const QUERY = gql`
  {
    foo
  }
`;

However, it doesn’t unescape characters. For the usage example, if you console.log(typeDefs) before and after replacing the import with const gql = String.raw you will see the difference in the type description markdown:

    "A foo."
    type Foo {
-     "The `Foo` ID."
+     "The \`Foo\` ID."
      id: ID!
    }