JsValue
JsValue
represent the JavaScript value in Rust
.
JsUndefined
Represent undefined
in JavaScript. It can not be casted into Rust
value, and no Rust
value can be casted into JsUndefined
.
The only way to create JsUndefined
in Rust is calling Env::get_undefined()
.
JsNull
Represent null
in JavaScript. Like JsUndefined
, it can not be casted to Rust
value and no Rust
value can be casted to it.
The only way to create JsNull
in Rust is calling Env::get_null()
.
JsNumber
f64 | u32 | i32 | i64 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
From | Env::create_double | Env::create_uint32 | Env::create_int32 | Env::create_int64 |
Into | TryInto | TryInto | TryInto | TryInto |
use std::convert::TryInto;
use napi::*;
#[js_function(1)]
fn fib(ctx: CallContext) -> Result<JsNumber> {
let input_number: i64 = ctx.get::<JsNumber>(0)?.try_into()?;
ctx.env.create_int64(fibonacci_native(input_number))
}
#[inline(always)]
fn fibonacci_native(n: i64) -> i64 {
match n {
1 | 2 => 1,
_ => fibonacci_native(n - 1) + fibonacci_native(n - 2),
}
}
JsBoolean
JsBoolean
represent boolean value in JavaScript.
Use JsBoolean::get_value()
to convert JsBoolean
into Rust bool
. And Env::get_boolean()
to convert Rust bool
into JsBoolean
.
#[js_function(1)]
fn not(ctx: CallContext) -> Result<JsBoolean> {
let condition: JsBoolean = ctx.get(0)?;
ctx.env.get_boolean(!condition.get_value()?)
}
not(true) // false
not(false) // true
JsString
Represent string
value in JavaScript. There 3 types of string
encoding you can interactive with N-API
: utf8
, utf16
and latin1
.
There is a article which may help you to understand encoding story in Node.js: https://kevin.burke.dev/kevin/node-js-string-encoding/ (opens in a new tab)
Using Env::create_string()
you could create JsString
from Rust &str
.
If you want get utf8 value from JsString
, you must using the JsString::into_utf8()
to get utf8 value explicit.
#[js_function(1)]
fn world(ctx: CallContext) -> Result<JsString> {
// or into_utf16/into_latin1 here
// if you want using into_latin1, you must enable `latin1` feature for `napi-rs`.
let input_string = ctx.get::<JsString>(0)?.into_utf8()?;
let output = format!("{} world!", input_string.as_str()?);
ctx.env.create_string(output.as_str())
}
world('hello') // hello world!
JsBuffer
Represents a Buffer
value in Node.js. Passing data between JavaScript and Rust using JsBuffer
has a small overhead so you might prefer it over other types.
For example, in some cases, converting a JavaScript string
into a Buffer
, pass it to Rust as a JsBuffer
and cast it as a &[u8]
is faster than passing the string directly to Rust. The string implementation in V8 is far more complicated than the ArrayBuffer
one, which is what Buffer
is implemented by.
#[js_function(1)]
fn set_buffer(ctx: CallContext) -> Result<JsUndefined> {
let buf = &mut ctx.get::<JsBuffer>(0)?.into_value()?; // &mut [u8]
buf[0] = 1;
buf[1] = 2;
ctx.env.get_undefined()
}
setBuffer(Buffer.from([0, 1])) // <Buffer 01 02>
JsSymbol
Represent Symbol
value in JavaScript. You can create JsSymbol
from &str
or JsString
// create from &str
#[js_function(1)]
fn create_symbol(ctx: CallContext) -> Result<JsSymbol> {
let desc = ctx.get::<JsString>(0)?.into_utf8()?;
ctx.env.create_symbol(Some(desc.as_str()?))
}
// create from JsString
#[js_function(1)]
fn create_symbol(ctx: CallContext) -> Result<JsSymbol> {
let desc = ctx.get::<JsString>(0)?;
ctx.env.create_symbol_from_js_string(desc)
}
JsObject
Represent Object
value in JavaScript. There are many object related API's in JsObject
. See document (opens in a new tab).
#[js_function(1)]
fn set_bar(ctx: CallContext) -> Result<JsUndefined> {
let mut obj = ctx.get::<JsObject>(0)?;
let bar: JsString = obj.get_named_property("bar")?;
let bar_str = bar.into_utf8()?;
obj.set_named_property("bar", ctx.env.create_string_from_std(format!("{} bar", bar_str.as_str()?)))?;
ctx.env.get_undefined()
}
setBar({ bar: 'bar' }) // { bar: "bar bar" }
JsDate
Represent Date
object in JavaScript. JavaScript Date
objects are described in Section 20.3 (opens in a new tab) of the ECMAScript Language Specification.
JsBigint
Represent Bigint
value in JavaScript.
JsExternal
This API allocates a JavaScript value with external data attached to it. This is used to pass external data through JavaScript code, so it can be retrieved later by native code using Env::get_value_external
(opens in a new tab).