0.1.0 • Published 8 years ago

slack-js v0.1.0

Weekly downloads
3
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
8 years ago

#Slack JS

Build Status

##Purpose Provide javascript developers with a great functional set of extensions for manipulating, querying and projecting data. Heavily inspired by LINQ.

##Design Built with ES6 generators to provide lazy evaluation, and some of the newer nicer features such as classes. Essentially we wrap your array or underlying datastructure to proxy your datastructure and provide a set of methods for manipulating your data and since we wrap we dont kill any of the built in methods or methods your add to Array et al prototype.

##Usage Everything works on a LazySource object. This is private to the module however we can use the static methods on Slack to get one.

var array = [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10];
var source = Slack.from(array);

Now that we have a source object we can manipulate the underlying array lazily with the large set of provided methods on LazySource.

var data = source.filter(x => x > 5).map(x => x * 10).take(2).enumerate();
for(let element of data){
  console.log(element);
}

In the example about we filter out all elements less tan 5 and then multiply them by 10 and take the first 2; you must call enumerate at the end if you wish to write a for of loop and extract each element and manipulate it.

##Functions

MethodDescription
filter(f)Selects only the elements that match the predicate f
map(f)Transforms each element with the mapping function f
concat(other)Combines another array to the current stream in a lazy fashion
concatLazy(other)Combines another lazy sequence with the current sequence in a lazy fashion
skip(n)Selects a new sequence with n items skipped
take(n)Selects a new sequence with n items choosen
any(f)Returns whether any element in the sequence matches the predicate f
all(f)Returns whether all elements in the sequence matche the predicate f
foreach(f)Executes the function f on each element in the sequence
flatMap(f)Returns a flattened sequence from a nested sequence using a flattening function f