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@jsepia/utils
Advanced tools
My utility library. Because some wheels still need to be reinvented.
import {isBrowser} from '@jsepia/utils'
if (isBrowser()) {
document.createElement('canvas')
}
import {IDGenerator} from '@jsepia/utils'
const catIDGenerator = new IDGenerator()
const dogIDGenerator = new IDGenerator()
function createCat(name) {
return {
id: catIDGenerator.generateID()
name: name,
toy: 'scratcher'
}
}
function createDog(name) {
return {
id: dogIDGenerator.generateID()
name: name,
toy: 'ball'
}
}
import {generateID} from '@jsepia/utils'
const entities = []
function spawnMonster() {
entities[generateID()] = new Monster()
}
function spawnNPC() {
entities[generateID()] = new NPC()
}
function getEntityType(id) {
if (entities[id] instanceof Monster) {
return 'monster'
}
else if (entities[id] instanceof NPC) {
return 'npc'
}
return 'unknown'
}
Recursively merges the properties of an object into another.
import {deepExtend} from '@jsepia/utils'
const defaults = {
targets: {
'app.js': 'src/**/*.js',
'tests.js': 'test/**/*.js'
},
verbose: false
}
const userPreferences = {
targets: {
'libs.js': 'lib/**/*.js'
}
}
const commandLineParams = {
verbose: true
}
const options = deepExtend(defaults, userPreferences, commandLineParams)
Output:
{
"targets": {
"app.js": "src/**/*.js",
"tests.js": "test/**/*.js",
"libs.js": "lib/**/*.js",
},
"verbose": true
}
Overrides the top-level properties of an object with another's.
import {extend} from '@jsepia/utils'
const config = {
env: 'development',
entry: ['app.js', 'test.js']
}
const params = {
env: 'production',
entry: 'lib/**/*.js'
}
const options = extend(config, params)
Output:
{
"env": "production",
"entry": "lib/**/*.js"
}
import {indexOfRegex} from '@jsepia/utils'
indexOfRegex('umm', /m/g) // 1
indexOfRegex('umm', /m/g, 2) // 2
Finds the index at the last occurrence of a regular expression.
import {lastIndexOfRegex} from '@jsepia/utils'
lastIndexOfRegex('umm', /m/g) // 2
lastIndexOfRegex('umm', /m/g, 2) // 1
Determines whether a value is an array.
import {isArray} from '@jsepia/utils'
isArray([]) // true
isArray({}) // false
isArray('') // false
import {isDefined} from '@jsepia/utils'
isDefined(null) // true
isDefined(undefined) // false
const kitty = {
ears: 2,
paws: 4,
status: 'cute'
}
isDefined(kitty.status) // true
isDefined(kitty.wings) // false
import {isIterable} from '@jsepia/utils'
isIterable() // true
isIterable([]) // true
isIterable('meow') // true
isIterable(null) // false
isIterable({}) // false
Determines if a value is numeric. All numbers are considered numeric. Strings are numeric only if they begin with a number (e.g. 5px).
Another way of looking at it is: isNumeric(foo) === true implies parseInt(foo) will return a valid number.
import {isNumeric} from '@jsepia/utils'
isNumeric(-95) // true
isNumeric('5.6') // true
isNumeric('-5.6') // true
isNumeric('5px') // true
isNumeric('five') // false
isNumeric('E79') // false
isNumeric() // false
isNumeric(null) // false
isNumeric(true) // false
isNumeric({}) // false
isNumeric([]) // false
Returns true if a value has the type object and is not null. This function helps you determine if it's safe to query a value's properties or perform any other object-specific operations on it.
import {isObject} from '@jsepia/utils'
isObject() // false
isObject(null) // false (even though typeof null === 'object')
isObject(function() {}) // false
isObject({}) // true
isObject([]) // true
// gotchas
isObject(true) // false
isObject(new Boolean()) // false
isObject(1) // false
isObject(new Number()) // false
isObject('') // false
isObject(new String()) // false
Determines whether a value is a plain object - i.e. an object that is not an instance of a prototype or class, or otherwise does not have a constructor
import {isPlainObject} from '@jsepia/utils'
isPlainObject() // false
isPlainObject([]) // false (even though typeof [] === 'object')
isPlainObject(NaN) // false (even though NaN is a Number type)
isPlainObject(new Date()) // false
isPlainObject({}) // true
import {buildUri} from '@jsepia/utils'
buildUri({
// it supports the basic options you would expect
protocol: 'http',
host: 'juliosepia.com',
port: '8080',
path: '/posts/util.html',
anchor: 'introduction', // hash
// you can pass credentials separately
user: 'jsepia',
password: 'hunter2',
// or as a single string
userInfo: 'jsepia:hunter2',
// you can pass query params separately
queryKey: {
version: '1.0',
format: 'html'
},
// or as a single string
query: 'version=1.0&format=html',
})
Output:
http://jsepia:hunter2@juliosepia.com:8080/posts/util.html?version=1.0&format=html#introduction
parseUri('http://jsepia:hunter2@juliosepia.com/posts/util.html?version=1.0&format=html#introduction')
Output:
{
"anchor": "introduction",
"authority": "jsepia:hunter2@juliosepia.com",
"directory": "/posts/",
"file": "util.html",
"host": "juliosepia.com",
"password": "hunter2",
"path": "/posts/util.html",
"port": "",
"protocol": "http",
"query": "version=1.0&format=html",
"queryKey": {
"format": "html",
"version": "1.0",
},
"relative": "/posts/util.html?version=1.0&format=html#introduction",
"source": "http://jsepia:hunter2@juliosepia.com/posts/util.html?version=1.0&format=html#introduction",
"user": "jsepia",
"userInfo": "jsepia:hunter2"
}
import {isValidUrl} from '@jsepia/utils'
const url = prompt('enter URL here')
if (isValidUrl(url)) {
request(url).then(
(response) => handleResponse,
(err) => handleError
)
}
else {
handleError(new Error(`Invalid URL: ${url}`))
}
# unit test
yarn test
# integ test (for CI and stuff)
yarn build && yarn test:integ
FAQs
My utility library. Because some wheels are worth reinventing.
The npm package @jsepia/utils receives a total of 13 weekly downloads. As such, @jsepia/utils popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @jsepia/utils demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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