Socket
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall

@steelbreeze/pivot

Package Overview
Dependencies
0
Maintainers
1
Versions
103
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

    @steelbreeze/pivot

Minimal TypeScript / JavaScript n-cube library


Version published
Weekly downloads
7
decreased by-12.5%
Maintainers
1
Created
Weekly downloads
 

Readme

Source

pivot

Maintainability

A minimalist pivot table library for TypeScript/JavaScript. While small (a mere 485 bytes when minified), this library is large in capability, supporting derived and custom dimensions, derived fields for dimensions and calculations, composite dimensions, filtering.

The library also provides a modest set of numerical selectors. Suggestions for additions, or better still contributions, are welcome.

Why create another pivot table library?

There are plenty of pivot table libraries in existence, so why create another one? Well, this is a spin-off from the steelbreeze/landscape project, where instead of aggregating numerical data from the pivot cube, non-numerical data is needed.

It also focuses just on dimension and cube creation, without any layout considerations keeping it small and unopinionated.

n-cubes

The libary allows 1-n dimensions to be passed into the pivot function allowing n-cube (or hypercube) generation.

Installation

NPM

For installation via the node package manager:

npm i @steelbreeze/pivot

Web

For web via a CDN:

import * as pivot from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/@steelbreeze/pivot';

Documentation

The documentation can be found here, and more discussion in the Wiki.

Example

The following is the result of pivoting publicly available information about the Fulham Football Club men's squad at the end of the 2020/21 season, calculating the average age of players by position and country.

import { distinct, criteria, pivot, map, average } from '@steelbreeze/pivot';
import { squad } from './fulham';

// the position dimension we want in a custom order
const positions = ['Goalkeeper', 'Defender', 'Midfielder', 'Forward'];

// the countries dimension we derive from the data and order alphabetically
const countries = squad.map(player => player.country).filter(distinct).sort();

// we then create dimensions which also reference a property in the source data 
const x = positions.map(criteria('position'));
const y = countries.map(criteria('country'));

// create the pivot cube from the squad data using position and country for x and y axes
let cube = pivot(squad, y, x);

// find the average age of players by position by country as at 2021-05-23
const result = map(cube, average(age(new Date('2021-05-23'))));

The full example can be found here.

The selection is the average age of the players grouped by position and country:

        Goalke… Defend… Midfie… Forward
Belgium         32
Camero…                 25
Denmark         24
England         25      23.25   23
France  28      27
Gabon                   27
Jamaica         28              28
Nether…         25
Nigeria         24              22
Portug…                         27
Scotla…                 31
Serbia                          26
Slovak… 24
Spain   33
USA             28

The full example code can be found here.

Alternatively, as can be seen in the web example, non-numerical content can also be queried, mapping the source data to an arbitrary selection:

const result = pivot.map(cube, pivot.select(player => `${player.givenName} ${player.familyName}`));

Resulting in this sort of output:

GoalkeeperDefenderMidfielderForward
BelgiumDenis Odoi
CameroonAndre-Frank Zambo Anguissa
DenmarkJoachim Anderson
EnglandTosin Abarabioyo, Joe BryanRuben Loftus-Cheek, Harrison Reed, Josh Onomah, Fabio CarvalhoAdemola Lookman
FranceAlphonse AreolaTerence Kongolo
GabonMario Lemina
JamaicaMichael HectorBobby De Cordova-Reid
NetherlandsKenny Tete
NigeriaOla AinaJosh Maja
PortugalIvan Cavaleiro
ScotlandKevin McDonald, Tom Cairney
SerbiaAleksander Mitrovic
SlovakiaMarek Rodak
SpainFabrico Agosto Ramirez
USATim Ream, Antonee Robinson

Data and calculations correct as of: 2021-05-23.

Keywords

FAQs

Last updated on 15 Jan 2024

Did you know?

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc