luamin uses the excellent luaparse library to parse Lua code into an Abstract Syntax Tree. Based on that AST, luamin then generates a (hopefully) more compact yet semantically equivalent Lua program. Here’s an online demo.
luamin was inspired by the LuaMinify and Esmangle projects.
Feel free to fork if you see possible improvements!
Via npm:
npm install luamin
Via Bower:
bower install luamin
Via Component:
component install mathiasbynens/luamin
In a browser:
<script src="luamin.js"></script>
In Narwhal, Node.js, and RingoJS:
var luamin = require('luamin');
In Rhino:
load('luamin.js');
Using an AMD loader like RequireJS:
require(
{
'paths': {
'luamin': 'path/to/luamin'
}
},
['luamin'],
function(luamin) {
console.log(luamin);
}
);
Usage example:
var luaCode = 'a = ((1 + 2) - 3) * (4 / (5 ^ 6)) -- foo';
luamin.minify(luaCode); // 'a=(1+2-3)*4/5^6'
// `minify` also accepts luaparse-compatible ASTs as its argument:
var ast = luaparse.parse(luaCode, { 'scope': true });
luamin.minify(ast); // 'a=(1+2-3)*4/5^6'
To use the luamin
binary in your shell, simply install luamin globally using npm:
npm install -g luamin
After that you will be able to minify Lua scripts from the command line:
$ luamin -c 'a = ((1 + 2) - 3) * (4 / (5 ^ 6))'
a=(1+2-3)*4/5^6
$ luamin -f foo.lua
a=(1+2-3)*4/5^6
See luamin --help
for the full list of options.
luamin has been tested in at least Chrome 25-48, Firefox 3-44, Safari 4-9, Opera 10-35, IE 6-11, Edge, Node.js v0.10.0–v5, Narwhal 0.3.2, RingoJS 0.8-0.11, PhantomJS 1.9.0, and Rhino 1.7.6.
After cloning this repository, run npm install
to install the dependencies needed for luamin development and testing. You may want to install Istanbul globally using npm install istanbul -g
.
Once that’s done, you can run the unit tests in Node using npm test
or node tests/tests.js
. To run the tests in Rhino, Ringo, Narwhal, and web browsers as well, use grunt test
.
To generate the code coverage report, use grunt cover
.
Mathias Bynens |
luamin is available under the MIT license.