Chopper
Chops a stream into pieces using a delimiter.
Install
$ npm install chopper
StreamChopper
The object created from StreamChopper() lets you read a line at a time from a
stream in a throttled manner:
require("chopper");
stream = process.stdin
var chopper = new StreamChopper(stream, "\n", function(line) {
chopper.pause();
console.log(line);
setTimeout(function() {
chopper.resume();
}, 500);
});
This outputs a line at a time with a 1/2 second delay between each.
All three arguments to the constructor are required.
Chopper
The object created from Chopper() cuts the stream into delimited pieces, but does not
throttle itself at all. The stream for Chopper() is just sequentials calls to feed it
more data via next().
Chopper() can be used 3 different ways.
Returning an Array
This:
log = console.log
var chopper = new Chopper("\0");
log(chopper.next('{"seq":0}\0'));
log(chopper.next('{"seq":1}\0'));
log(chopper.next('{"seq":'));
log(chopper.next('2}\0'));
log(chopper.next('{"seq":3}\0{"seq":4}\0'));
log(chopper.next('{"seq":5}\0{'));
log(chopper.next('"seq":6}\0'));
log(chopper.next('\0'));
log(chopper.next('{"seq":7}\0{"seq":8}\0{"seq":9}'));
log(chopper.next('\0{"seq":10}'));
Outputs:
[ '{"seq":0}' ]
[ '{"seq":1}' ]
[]
[ '{"seq":2}' ]
[ '{"seq":3}', '{"seq":4}' ]
[ '{"seq":5}' ]
[ '{"seq":6}' ]
[ '' ]
[ '{"seq":7}', '{"seq":8}' ]
[ '{"seq":9}' ]
Using a Callback
This:
var chopper = new Chopper("\n");
var f = function(m) { log(m) }
chopper.next('{"seq":0}\n', f)
chopper.next('{"seq":1}\n', f)
chopper.next('{"seq":', f)
chopper.next('2}\n', f)
chopper.next('{"seq":3}\n{"seq":4}\n', f)
chopper.next('{"seq":5}\n{', f)
chopper.next('"seq":6}\n', f)
chopper.next('\n', f)
chopper.next('{"seq":7}\n{"seq":8}\n{"seq":9}', f)
chopper.next('\n{"seq":10}', f)
Outputs this:
{"seq":0}
{"seq":1}
{"seq":2}
{"seq":3}
{"seq":4}
{"seq":5}
{"seq":6}
{"seq":7}
{"seq":8}
{"seq":9}
Using a Persistent Callback
This:
var f = function(m) { log(m) }
var chopper = new Chopper("\n", f);
chopper.next('Hello.\nGoodbye.\n')
chopper.next('Why')
chopper.next(' are you')
chopper.next(' here?\nI do not know.')
chopper.next('\nok')
Outputs this:
Hello.
Goodbye.
Why are you here?
I do not know.
The "ok" string at the end isn't recognized as it isn't terminated with \n.
Thanks
If you find errors please send me pull requests with repairs.