Javascript Interpreter for C# (no dependencies)
#scripting #script-engine

Sebastien Ros 16f5df6e55 Implementing String.prototype.substr 11 years ago
.nuget 9b18dabfed Adding missing nuget.exe 11 years ago
Jint 16f5df6e55 Implementing String.prototype.substr 11 years ago
Jint.Benchmark d2a5131df8 Enabling nuget package restore for CI 11 years ago
Jint.Repl 886f59c3a3 Displaying error message in Repl 11 years ago
Jint.Tests 6d0b917dba Adding ability to convert ObjectInstance into object 11 years ago
Jint.Tests.CommonScripts 3c9bf7fc63 Moving SunSpider tests to its own assembly 11 years ago
Jint.Tests.Ecma 285a7cbc84 Fixing RegExp unit tests 11 years ago
Jint.Tests.Scaffolding b6d60818da Adding Ecma 262 tests 12 years ago
.gitignore 2dab8046d6 Scaffolding project vs. hand written classes 12 years ago
CREDITS.txt f53137698a Adding license information 11 years ago
Jint.sln 3c9bf7fc63 Moving SunSpider tests to its own assembly 11 years ago
Jint.sln.DotSettings 478662033e Refactoring Date to reflect specifications 11 years ago
LICENSE.txt f53137698a Adding license information 11 years ago
README.md ff89dc7c31 Update README.md 11 years ago

README.md

Build status

Jint

Jint is a Javascript interpreter for .NET. Jint doesn't compile Javascript to .NET bytecode and in this sense might be best suited for projects requiring to run relatively small scripts faster, or which need to run on different platforms.

Objectives

Example

This example defines a new value named log pointing to Console.WriteLine, then executes a script calling log('Hello World!').

var engine = new Engine()
    .SetValue("log", new Action<object>(Console.WriteLine))
    ;

engine.Execute(@"
  function hello() { 
    log("Hello World");
  };

  hello();
");

Here, the variable x is set to 3 and x * x is executed in JavaScript. The result is returned to .NET directly, in this case as a double value 9.

var square = new Engine()
    .SetValue("x", 3)
    .Execute("x * x")
    .ToObject()
    ;

You can also directly pass POCOs or anonymous objects and use them from JavaScript. In this example for instance a new Person instance is manipulated from JavaScript.

var p = new Person {
    Name = "Mickey Mouse"
};

var engine = new Engine()
    .SetValue("p", p)
    .Execute("p.Name === 'Mickey Mouse')
    ;

Roadmap

Features already implemented:

  • Most of the ECMAScript test suite (http://test262.ecmascript.org/) is passing
  • Manipulate CLR objects from JavaScript, including:
    • Single values
    • Objects
    • Properties
    • Methods
    • Delegates
    • Anonymous objects
  • Convert JavaScript values to CLR objects
    • Primitive values
    • Object -> expando objects (IDictionary<string, object> and dynamic)
    • Array -> object[]
    • Date -> DateTime
    • number -> double
    • string -> string
    • boolean -> bool
    • Regex -> RegExp

Current tasks:

  • Fix remaining unit tests
    • Regular expressions (15.10)