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vlt Launches "reproduce": A New Tool Challenging the Limits of Package Provenance
vlt's new "reproduce" tool verifies npm packages against their source code, outperforming traditional provenance adoption in the JavaScript ecosystem.
This package provides barebone utilities for working with (sync and async) iterators and iterable values in nodejs.
This package provides barebone utilities for working with (sync and async) iterators and iterable values in nodejs.
More specifically it provides the highorder filter, map and find functions, as well as, concat and merge utilities.
Map over the values of any iterable and get a new iterable object.
const result = map([1, 2, 3], x => 2 * x);
result.next(); // { value: 2, done: false };
result.next(); // { value: 4, done: false };
result.next(); // { value: 6, done: false };
result.next(); // { value: undefined, done: true };
If the initial argument is an async iterator or async iterable value (Readable streams for example) than map will return a new async iterable.
// A contrived readable stream
const readable = new Readable({ objectMode: true });
readable.push(1);
readable.push(2);
readable.push(3);
readable.push(null);
const result = map(readable, x => 2 * x);
result.next(); // Promise<{ value: 2, done: false }>;
result.next(); // Promise<{ value: 4, done: false }>;
result.next(); // Promise<{ value: 6, done: false }>;
result.next(); // Promise<{ value: undefined, done: true }>;
const result = filter([1, 2, 3], x => x % 2 === 1);
result.next(); // { value: 1, done: false };
result.next(); // { value: 3, done: false };
result.next(); // { value: undefined, done: true };
Same as with map
, if the first argument is an async iterator or iterable value the returned value shall also be an async iterable value.
const iter = (async function* () {
yield 1;
await somePromise();
yield 2;
await someOtherPromise();
yield 3;
})();
const result = filter([1, 2, 3], x => x % 2 === 1);
result.next(); // Promise<{ value: 1, done: false }>;
result.next(); // Promise<{ value: 3, done: false }>;
result.next(); // Promise<{ value: undefined, done: true }>;
Should your iterables map onto more iterables you can flat map them to flatten the second level of iterables. flatMap always returns an async iterable since the mapping function is computed iteratively and there is no way to know in advance if the resulting values will be sync or async iterable.
const iter = flatMap(['file.txt', 'next.txt'], file => fs.createReadableStream(file));
Analagous to the Array.prototype.reduce
method, fiter provides its own reduce that works on any sync/async iterable value. If the iterable is synchronous the value is returned synchronously. If the iterable is async a Promise of the value is returned.
const file = fs.createReadStream('./somefilepath.txt');
const lines = await reduce(file, (acc, value) => acc + countNewLineCharacters(chunk), 0);
Analagous to Array.prototype.find
, will return first element to match predicate function otherwise undefined.
find([1, 2, 3], x => x % 2 === 0); // 2
find([1, 2, 3], x => x === 0); // undefined
When using an async iterable the result if a Promise.
const iter = (async function* () {
yield 1;
await somePromise();
yield 2;
await someOtherPromise();
yield 3;
})();
find(iter, x => x % 2 === 0); // Promise<2>
find(iter, x => x === 0); // Promise<undefined>
Concat will take iterable values and return a new iterable object that is the concatenation of those iterables. Should any iterable be async the returned iterable shall also be iterable.
const iter = concat(
[1],
(function* () {
yield 2;
})()
);
iter.next(); // { value: 1, done: false };
iter.next(); // { value: 2, done: false };
iter.next(); // { value: undefined, done: true };
async example:
const readable = new Readable({ objectMode: true });
readable.push(3);
readable.push(null);
const iter = concat(
[1],
(async function* () {
await somePromise();
yield 2;
})(),
readable
);
iter.next(); // Promise<{ value: 1, done: false }>;
iter.next(); // Promise<{ value: 2, done: false }>;
iter.next(); // Promise<{ value: 3, done: false }>;
iter.next(); // Promise<{ value: undefined, done: true }>;
If the order between iterables do not need to be preserved a merge utility is provided. The result of merge will always be an async iterable regardless of whether all iterable values to be merged are synchronous.
const readable = new Readable({ objectMode: true });
readable.push(3);
readable.push(null);
const iter = merge(
[1],
(async function* () {
await somePromise();
yield 2;
})(),
readable
);
// the order of values when calling next is not guaranteed but all values 1, 2, 3 will be emitted before done is true.
FAQs
This package provides barebone utilities for working with (sync and async) iterators and iterable values in nodejs.
The npm package fiter receives a total of 2 weekly downloads. As such, fiter popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that fiter 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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