1.0.6 • Published 6 years ago

flat-redis v1.0.6

Weekly downloads
3
License
BSD-3-Clause
Repository
github
Last release
6 years ago

flat-redis

An updated version of 'flat' npm module to create/retrieve nested redis hmset objects. Take a nested Javascript object and flatten it, or unflatten an object with delimited keys.

Installation

$ npm install flat

The catch

A manual updation on the flatten/unflatten logic to mark empty objects ({}) and empty arrays([]) while flattening and replacing them with appropriate values upon unflattening

Reserved key

In order to not modify the underlying flattening/unflattening logic, a reserved key 'EMPTY_KEYS' has been added with every flattened object.

Methods

flatten(original, options)

Flattens the object - it'll return an object one level deep, regardless of how nested the original object was:

var flatten = require('flat')

flatten({
	key1: {
		keyA: 'valueI'
	},
	key2: {
		keyB: 'valueII'
	},
	key3: { a: { b: { c: 2 } } }
})

// {
//   'key1.keyA': 'valueI',
//   'key2.keyB': 'valueII',
//   'key3.a.b.c': 2
// }

unflatten(original, options)

Flattening is reversible too, you can call flatten.unflatten() on an object:

var unflatten = require('flat').unflatten

unflatten({
	'three.levels.deep': 42,
	'three.levels': {
		nested: true
	}
})

// {
//     three: {
//         levels: {
//             deep: 42,
//             nested: true
//         }
//     }
// }

Options

delimiter

Use a custom delimiter for (un)flattening your objects, instead of ..

safe

When enabled, both flat and unflatten will preserve arrays and their contents. This is disabled by default.

var flatten = require('flat')

flatten({
	this: [
		{ contains: 'arrays' },
		{ preserving: {
			  them: 'for you'
		}}
	]
}, {
	safe: true
})

// {
//     'this': [
//         { contains: 'arrays' },
//         { preserving: {
//             them: 'for you'
//         }}
//     ]
// }

object

When enabled, arrays will not be created automatically when calling unflatten, like so:

unflatten({
	'hello.you.0': 'ipsum',
	'hello.you.1': 'lorem',
	'hello.other.world': 'foo'
}, { object: true })

// hello: {
//     you: {
//         0: 'ipsum',
//         1: 'lorem',
//     },
//     other: { world: 'foo' }
// }

overwrite

When enabled, existing keys in the unflattened object may be overwritten if they cannot hold a newly encountered nested value:

unflatten({
	'TRAVIS': 'true',
	'TRAVIS_DIR': '/home/travis/build/kvz/environmental'
}, { overwrite: true })

// TRAVIS: {
//     DIR: '/home/travis/build/kvz/environmental'
// }

Without overwrite set to true, the TRAVIS key would already have been set to a string, thus could not accept the nested DIR element.

This only makes sense on ordered arrays, and since we're overwriting data, should be used with care.

maxDepth

Maximum number of nested objects to flatten.

var flatten = require('flat')

flatten({
	key1: {
		keyA: 'valueI'
	},
	key2: {
		keyB: 'valueII'
	},
	key3: { a: { b: { c: 2 } } }
}, { maxDepth: 2 })

// {
//   'key1.keyA': 'valueI',
//   'key2.keyB': 'valueII',
//   'key3.a': { b: { c: 2 } }
// }