1.0.7 • Published 6 years ago

envy-jsutil v1.0.7

Weekly downloads
4
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
6 years ago

envy.js

A free javascript browser environment utility library

Installation

There are two versions packaged. One is the development version, the other is a minified version. I believe this should be self explanatory.

Git Clone

git clone https://github.com/alicenq/envy.js.git
cd envy.js/dist

NPM

npm install envy-jsutil

UNPKG

Development

<script src='https://unpkg.com/envy-jsutil/dist/envy.js'></script>

Production

<script src='https://unpkg.com/envy-jsutil/dist/envy.min.js'></script>

Window Utility

WARNING!!!!!

DO NOT USE window.onload! Many of these methods will refuse to work if you override it!

on

This is used to register window events, such as onload. Unlike the standard events however, this allows you to register multiple callbacks, which will then be called in whatever sequence they were registered.

Usage:

NV.on('load', function(){
   alert('The window has loaded!')
})

onload

This is simply shorthand for NV.on('load', ...)

Usage:

NV.onload(function(){
    alert('The window has loaded!')
})

Document Utility

import

Used to import an external script by creating a <script> tag. A Promise is returned. If a reference child is specified this script will be inserted before the reference child, otherwise it'll be inserted before the envy script.

Usage:

// Simple script import
NV.import('my/script.js')

// Prints out a script tag 
NV.import('my/script.js', { type: 'text/javascript' }).then(console.log)

link

Used to import an external file, usually a stylesheet by creating a <link> tag. A Promise is returned. If a reference child is specified this script will be inserted before the reference child, otherwise it'll be inserted before the envy script.

Usage:

// Simple CSS import
NV.link('my/stylesheet.css')

// Prints out a link tag 
NV.link('my/stylesheet.css', { type: 'text/css', rel: 'stylesheet' }).then(console.log)

Object Utility

fetchJson

An extension of the fetch API which simply returns an object in its Promise instead of a Response. This can already be done quite easily using the fetch API, this just makes it faster and easier to type.

Usage:

// Prints decoded JSON data
NV.fetchJson('/my/path').then(console.log)

fetchText

An extension of the fetch API which simply returns a string in its Promise instead of a Response. This can already be done quite easily using the fetch API, this just makes it faster and easier to type.

Usage:

// Prints text data
NV.fetchData('/my/path').then(console.log)

merge

This performs a deep version of Object.assign by copying data from a source object to a target object. The last parameter is an optional merge strategy. This can be either a callback function or one of the following strings: 'theirs', 'ours', 'sum', 'error'. By default if undefined this is 'theirs'

This works recursively so when used on an object will merge all root-level parameters as well as every child object.

Usage:

// prints { a:2, b:2, c:3 }
console.log(NV.merge(
    { a: 2 }, 
    { b: 2, c: 3 }
));	

// prints { a:100, b:2, c:3 }
console.log(NV.merge(
    { a: 100 }, 
    { a: 1, b: 2, c: 3}, 
    'ours'
));	

// prints { a:50, b:2, c:3 }
console.log(NV.merge(
    { a: 100 },
    { a: 0, b: 2, c: 3 }, 
    function(a, b){ return (a+b)/2; } 
));	

// prints { a: [0, 1, 2, 100, 200, 300], b: {c: 1, d: 1} }
console.log(NV.merge(
    { a: [0, 1, 2], b: {c: 1} },
    { a: [100, 200, 300], b: {d: 1} },
    'combine'
));