It sounds like a complete waste of time. If you are talking about small code snippets then simply write new original Python to replace them.
There are some jobs that contain rather simple JavaScript snippets, and I was trying to design a first prototype that simply takes the JS parts and runs them in a transpiler.
In this respect, I found a couple of packages that could be leveraged: - js2py: https://github.com/PiotrDabkowski/Js2Py - mini-racer: https://github.com/bpcreech/PyMiniRacer Yet, both seem to be abandoned packages that might not be suitable for usage in production.
Therefore, I was thinking about parsing and translating Javascript's abstract syntax trees to Python. Whereas a colleague suggested I bring up an LLM pipeline.
How much of an overkill that might be? Has anyone else ever dealt with a JavaScript-to-Python migration and could share heads-ups on strategies or pitfalls to avoid?
It sounds like a complete waste of time. If you are talking about small code snippets then simply write new original Python to replace them.
The hard work will be validating that the code they write for you is exactly right. You would have to do that if you wrote the code yourself, too. The LLMs will accelerate the writing-the-code part but the manual QA work will still be on you: https://simonwillison.net/2025/Mar/11/using-llms-for-code/#y...