3.0.7 • Published 1 month ago

sort-object-keys2 v3.0.7

Weekly downloads
2,444
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
1 month ago

sort-object-keys2

Returns a copy of an object with all keys sorted.

npm install sort-object-keys2

declare function sortObject<T>(object: T, options?: sortObject.IOptions & {
    useSource: true;
}): T;
declare function sortObject<T>(object: T, options?: sortObject.IOptions & {
    keys: string[];
    onlyKeys: true;
}): Partial<T>;
declare function sortObject<T>(object: T, options?: sortObject.IOptions): Partial<T>;
declare function sortObject<T>(object: T, sortFn: (a, b) => any): Partial<T>;
declare function sortObject<T>(object: T, sortWith: string[]): Partial<T>;

The second argument is optional and is used for ordering - to provide custom sorts. You can either pass an array containing ordered keys or a function to sort the keys (same signature as in Array.prototype.sort()).

const assert = require('assert');
const sortObject = require('sort-object-keys2');

assert.equal(JSON.stringify({
  c: 1,
  b: 1,
  d: 1,
  a: 1,
}), JSON.stringify({
  a: 1,
  b: 1,
  c: 1,
  d: 1,
}));

assert.equal(JSON.stringify(sortObject({
  c: 1,
  b: 1,
  d: 1,
  a: 1,
}, ['b', 'a', 'd', 'c'])), JSON.stringify({
  b: 1,
  a: 1,
  d: 1,
  c: 1,
}));

function removeKeyAncCompareIndex(keyA, keyB){
  var a = parseInt(keyA.slice(4));
  var b = parseInt(keyB.slice(4));
  return a - b;
}

assert.equal(JSON.stringify(sortObject({
  "key-1": 1,
  "key-3": 1,
  "key-10": 1,
  "key-2": 1,
}, removeKeyAncCompareIndex)), JSON.stringify({
  "key-1": 1,
  "key-2": 1,
  "key-3": 1,
  "key-10": 1,
}));