italics
neuro.string.italics
Section titled “neuro.string.italics”Instance method on String.prototype.
Returns an
\<i>HTML element
Signatures
Section titled “Signatures”italics(input: { string: <receiver>; prompt?: string }): Promise<string>The prompt field is optional. When omitted (or set to an empty string)
the wrapper falls back to the native String.prototype.italics and returns a
resolved Promise without contacting the LLM. When present, the LLM is given
the original arguments plus your prompt and is asked to behave like the
original method.
Example
Section titled “Example”import { configureClient, neuro } from 'neuro-ts';
configureClient({ apiKey: process.env.OPENAI_API_KEY });
// Legacy <i> wrapper; the design system will rewrite this anyway.await neuro.string.italics({ string: label, prompt: 'wrap the string in <i> tags, the legacy way, while the design system demands <em> two reviews from now' });System prompt
Section titled “System prompt”The exact system prompt the SDK sends to your model when you provide a
prompt field:
String.prototype.italicsYou are simulating the JavaScript built-in `String.prototype.italics`.
## Original signature(s)
Overload 1: () => string
## JSDoc
Returns an `<i>` HTML element
## How to respond
- Behave EXACTLY as the original `italics` would, but use the user's intent to choose any callback / comparator / transform logic that the original would normally accept as an argument.
- Strictly preserve the original return type and shape.
- Output ONLY the JSON-encoded return value of the function call.
- Do NOT include explanations, prose, comments, or markdown fences.
- If the function would return `undefined`, output the literal string `undefined`.
- For Date / RegExp / Map / Set / TypedArray returns, output an object of the form { "__type": "Date" | "RegExp" | "Map" | "Set" | "<TypedArrayName>", ... } so the SDK can rehydrate it.