Skip to content

liuxy0551/monaco-sql-languages

This branch is 1 commit ahead of, 3 commits behind DTStack/monaco-sql-languages:main.

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

984887b · Feb 13, 2025
Aug 9, 2024
Sep 2, 2020
Apr 1, 2024
Aug 9, 2024
Nov 13, 2024
Feb 13, 2025
Aug 9, 2024
Nov 14, 2024
Apr 1, 2024
Apr 1, 2024
Jul 7, 2023
Aug 9, 2024
Sep 18, 2020
Feb 13, 2025
Sep 2, 2020
Nov 14, 2024
Nov 14, 2024
Mar 10, 2021
Jun 9, 2016
Oct 9, 2024
Feb 13, 2025
Feb 13, 2025
Sep 1, 2023
Apr 1, 2024
Mar 29, 2024

Repository files navigation

Monaco SQL Languages

NPM version NPM downloads

English | 简体中文

This project is based on the SQL language project of Monaco Editor, which was forked from the monaco-languages.The difference is that Monaco SQL Languages supports various SQL languages and the corresponding advanced features for the Big Data field.


Feature highlights

  • Code Highlighting
  • Syntax Validation
  • Code Completion

Powered By dt-sql-parser


Online Preview

https://dtstack.github.io/monaco-sql-languages/

Powered By molecule.


Supported SQL Languages

  • MySQL
  • Flink
  • Spark
  • Hive
  • Trino (Presto)
  • PostgreSQL
  • Impala

Installing

npm install monaco-sql-languages

Tips: Monaco SQL Languages is only guaranteed to work stably on monaco-editor@0.31.0 for now.


Integrating


Usage

  1. Import language contributions

    Tips: If integrated via MonacoEditorWebpackPlugin, it will help us to import contribution files automatically. Otherwise, you need to import the contribution files manually.

    import 'monaco-sql-languages/esm/languages/mysql/mysql.contribution';
    import 'monaco-sql-languages/esm/languages/flink/flink.contribution';
    import 'monaco-sql-languages/esm/languages/spark/spark.contribution';
    import 'monaco-sql-languages/esm/languages/hive/hive.contribution';
    import 'monaco-sql-languages/esm/languages/trino/trino.contribution';
    import 'monaco-sql-languages/esm/languages/pgsql/pgsql.contribution';
    import 'monaco-sql-languages/esm/languages/impala/impala.contribution';
    
    // Or you can import all language contributions at once.
    // import 'monaco-sql-languages/esm/all.contributions';
  2. Setup language features

    You can setup language features via setupLanguageFeatures. For example, setup code completion feature of flinkSQL language.

    import { LanguageIdEnum, setupLanguageFeatures } from 'monaco-sql-languages';
    
    setupLanguageFeatures(LanguageIdEnum.FLINK, {
        completionItems: {
            enable: true,
            triggerCharacters: [' ', '.'],
            completionService: //... ,
        }
    });

    By default, Monaco SQL Languages only provides keyword autocompletion, and you can customize your completionItem list via completionService.

    import { languages } from 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/editor/editor.api';
    import {
        setupLanguageFeatures,
        LanguageIdEnum,
        CompletionService,
        ICompletionItem,
        EntityContextType
     } from 'monaco-sql-languages';
    
    const completionService: CompletionService = function (
        model,
        position,
        completionContext,
        suggestions, // syntax context info at caretPosition
        entities // tables, columns in the syntax context of the editor text
    ) {
        return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
            if (!suggestions) {
                return Promise.resolve([]);
            }
            const { keywords, syntax } = suggestions;
            const keywordsCompletionItems: ICompletionItem[] = keywords.map((kw) => ({
                label: kw,
                kind: languages.CompletionItemKind.Keyword,
                detail: 'keyword',
                sortText: '2' + kw
            }));
    
            let syntaxCompletionItems: ICompletionItem[] = [];
    
            syntax.forEach((item) => {
                if (item.syntaxContextType === EntityContextType.DATABASE) {
                    const databaseCompletions: ICompletionItem[] = []; // some completions about databaseName
                    syntaxCompletionItems = [...syntaxCompletionItems, ...databaseCompletions];
                }
                if (item.syntaxContextType === EntityContextType.TABLE) {
                    const tableCompletions: ICompletionItem[] = []; // some completions about tableName
                    syntaxCompletionItems = [...syntaxCompletionItems, ...tableCompletions];
                }
            });
    
            resolve([...syntaxCompletionItems, ...keywordsCompletionItems]);
        });
    };
    
    setupLanguageFeatures(LanguageIdEnum.FLINK, {
        completionItems: {
            enable: true,
            completionService: //... ,
        }
    });
  3. Create the Monaco Editor instance and specify the language you need

    import { LanguageIdEnum } from 'monaco-sql-languages';
    
    monaco.editor.create(document.getElementById('container'), {
        value: 'select * from tb_test',
        language: LanguageIdEnum.FLINK // languageId
    });

Monaco Theme

Monaco SQL Languages plan to support more themes in the future.

Monaco SQL Languages provides built-in Monaco Theme that is named vsPlusTheme. vsPlusTheme inspired by vscode default plus colorTheme and it contains three styles of themes inside:

  • darkTheme: Inherited from monaco built-in theme vs-dark;
  • lightTheme: Inherited from monaco built-in theme vs;
  • hcBlackTheme: Inherited from monaco built-in theme hc-black;

Use Monaco SQL Languages built-in vsPlusTheme

import { vsPlusTheme } from 'monaco-sql-languages';
import { editor } from 'monaco-editor';

// import themeData and defineTheme, you can customize the theme name, e.g. sql-dark
editor.defineTheme('sql-dark', vsPlusTheme.darkThemeData);
editor.defineTheme('sql-light', vsPlusTheme.lightThemeData);
editor.defineTheme('sql-hc', vsPlusTheme.hcBlackThemeData);

// specify the theme you have defined
editor.create(null as any, {
    theme: 'sql-dark',
    language: 'flinksql'
});

Customize your own Monaco theme

import { TokenClassConsts, postfixTokenClass } from 'monaco-sql-languages';

// Customize the various tokens style
const myThemeData: editor.IStandaloneThemeData = {
    base: 'vs-dark',
    inherit: true,
    rules: [
        { token: postfixTokenClass(TokenClassConsts.COMMENT), foreground: '6a9955' },
        { token: postfixTokenClass(TokenClassConsts.IDENTIFIER), foreground: '9cdcfe' },
        { token: postfixTokenClass(TokenClassConsts.KEYWORD), foreground: '569cd6' },
        { token: postfixTokenClass(TokenClassConsts.NUMBER), foreground: 'b5cea8' },
        { token: postfixTokenClass(TokenClassConsts.STRING), foreground: 'ce9178' },
        { token: postfixTokenClass(TokenClassConsts.TYPE), foreground: '4ec9b0' }
    ],
    colors: {}
};

// Define the monaco theme
editor.defineTheme('my-theme', myThemeData);

postfixTokenClass is not required in most cases, but since Monaco SQL Languages has tokenPostfix: 'sql' internally set for all SQL languages, in some cases your custom style may not work if you don't use postfixTokenClassClass to handle TokenClassConsts.*.


Dev: cheat sheet

  • initial setup

    pnpm install
  • open the dev web

    pnpm watch-esm
    cd website
    pnpm install
    pnpm dev
  • build

    pnpm build
  • run test

    pnpm test
    

Code of Conduct

This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.


License

MIT

About

SQL languages for monaco-editor

Resources

License

Security policy

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • TypeScript 97.5%
  • JavaScript 2.1%
  • Other 0.4%