I've added JSDoc comments to background, plugin core, and settings files.

This change introduces JSDoc-style comments to several key areas of the extension to improve your code's understanding and maintainability:

- `src/background/news.ts`: I added comments to `fetchNews`, `fetchAustraliaNews`, and `rssFeedsByCountry` to explain news fetching logic.
- `src/plugins/core/manager.ts`: I added comprehensive JSDoc comments to the `PluginManager` class and its methods, detailing its role in the plugin lifecycle.
- `src/plugins/core/createAPI.ts`: I documented `createPluginAPI` (which creates the main API for plugins) and `createSettingsAPI` (responsible for plugin settings management, initially misidentified as `createPluginSettings`).
- `src/plugins/core/settingsHelpers.ts`: I added comments to functions that define the structure of plugin settings (e.g., `numberSetting`, `stringSetting`, `defineSettings`, `Setting` decorator), clarifying their definition-time role.
This commit is contained in:
google-labs-jules[bot]
2025-05-29 12:27:47 +00:00
parent 074e73b0fd
commit afdbfe3190
4 changed files with 347 additions and 7 deletions
+38
View File
@@ -1,5 +1,18 @@
import Parser from "rss-parser";
/**
* Fetches news articles specifically for Australia from the NewsAPI.
*
* This function handles a specific case for fetching Australian news. It includes a
* mechanism to retry the fetch operation by appending "%00" to the URL if a
* rate limit error (`response.code == "rateLimited"`) is encountered. This is
* likely a workaround for cache-busting or bypassing certain rate-limiting measures.
*
* @param {string} url The NewsAPI URL to fetch Australian news from.
* @param {any} sendResponse A callback function (likely from a browser extension message listener)
* to send the fetched news data back to the caller.
* It's called with an object like `{ news: responseData }`.
*/
const fetchAustraliaNews = async (url: string, sendResponse: any) => {
fetch(url)
.then((result) => result.json())
@@ -12,6 +25,12 @@ const fetchAustraliaNews = async (url: string, sendResponse: any) => {
});
};
/**
* A record mapping lowercase country codes (e.g., "usa", "canada") to an array
* of RSS feed URLs for news sources in that country.
*
* @type {Record<string, string[]>}
*/
const rssFeedsByCountry: Record<string, string[]> = {
usa: [
"https://rss.nytimes.com/services/xml/rss/nyt/HomePage.xml",
@@ -54,6 +73,25 @@ const rssFeedsByCountry: Record<string, string[]> = {
netherlands: ["https://www.dutchnews.nl/feed/", "https://www.nrc.nl/rss/"],
};
/**
* Fetches news articles based on a specified source.
*
* The source can be:
* 1. The string "australia": Fetches news from Australian sources via NewsAPI,
* handled by the `fetchAustraliaNews` function.
* 2. A lowercase country code (e.g., "usa", "canada"): Fetches news from a predefined
* list of RSS feeds for that country, as specified in `rssFeedsByCountry`.
* 3. A direct RSS feed URL (starting with "http"): Fetches news directly from this URL.
*
* The fetched articles are then sent back to the caller using the `sendResponse` callback.
*
* @param {string} source The news source identifier. This can be "australia", a
* lowercase country code, or a direct RSS feed URL.
* @param {any} sendResponse A callback function (typically from a browser extension
* message listener, like `chrome.runtime.onMessage`)
* used to send the fetched news data back to the caller.
* It's called with an object like `{ news: { articles: [...] } }`.
*/
export async function fetchNews(source: string, sendResponse: any) {
if (source === "australia") {
const date = new Date();