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Fuzzy mapping for string replacement.
Via npm
$ npm install fuzzymap
$ make test
Making a map is as simple as making a hash:
Sample map making:
var fuzzymap = require('fuzzymap');
var mapper = fuzzymapper.defineMap({
'Grettings': /hello/ig,
'Goodbye': "bye",
'No Cursing!': ["fcuk", /sh[ia]t?/, "avada kedavra"]
});
mapper.map("HELLO, guv'na!"); //returns 'Greetings'
mapper.map("goodbyeee nurse!"); //returns 'Goodbye'
mapper.map("I like fcuk brand"); //returns 'No Cursing!'
mapper.map("That is some shi'"); //returns 'No Cursing!'
The mapper will search the map until it makes a match, and returns the first match it makes.
This takes a map and returns to you a new mapper object; Each time you call it you get a new Mapper object.
Once you've created a Mapper, you can submit strings to test against your map. The mapper will walk to map until it finds a match, then return it immediately. If no matches are made, it returns the string supplied;
var fuzzymap = require('fuzzymap');
var mapper = fuzzymap.defineMap({
'Name': [ /NAME/, "Username" ]
});
mapper.map("MY NAME IS EARL!"); //returns 'Name'
mapper.map("Please enter your Username:"); //returns 'Name'
mapper.map("named pair"); //returns 'named pair'
This makes sure you should always get a value back. This is true with null or empty maps as well.
var fuzzymap = require('fuzzymap');
fuzzymap.defineMap(null).map("data in"); //returns 'data in'
fuzzymap.defineMap({}).map("string out"); //returns 'string out'
Returns to you the map object you passed in when creating the mapper.
Returns the last result from Mapper.map() being called. Defaults to null.
var fuzzymap = require('fuzzymap');
var mapper = fuzzymap.defineMap({
'Name': /name/i
});
mapper.last(); //returns null
mapper.map("Username"); //returns 'Name'
mapper.last(); //returns 'Name'
Returns a disorderd, unique list of registered map keys. Defaults to empty array.
var fuzzymap = require('fuzzymap');
var mapper = fuzzymap.defineMap([{
'Name': /name/i,
'Title': ['title', 'Title']
}, {
'Number': [/\d+/]
}, {
'Name': 'duplicate key'
});
mapper.keys(); //returns ['Name', 'Title', 'Number']
This style is useful for when maps are simple and you're not worried about collisions.
var fuzzymap = require('fuzzymap');
var simpleMap = {
AuthorName: [/author/, /author_?name/i],
PIN: ["personal identification number", /pin/i, /p\.i\.n\./i]
};
var mapper = fuzzymap.defineMap(simpleMap);
mapper.map("author's name"); //returns 'AuthorName'
mapper.map("AUTHORNAME"); //returns 'AuthorName'
mapper.map("pin number"); //returns 'PIN'
mapper.map("P.I.N. number"); //returns 'PIN'
mapper.map("something new"); //returns 'something new'
Mapper will walk the map (in no particular order) until a match is made or it runs out of options.
There are times when the order that map tries to execute matters. For example, the following makes this user unhappy:
var badMap = {
UNHAPPY: /happy/,
HAPPY: /happy/
};
var mapper = fuzzymap.defineMap(badMap);
mapper.map("happy"); //returns 'HAPPY' or 'UNHAPPY'
mapper.map("unhappy time"); //returns 'HAPPY' or 'UNHAPPY'
//Since hashes are inherently unorderd, we can't ensure the right mapping is made!
//Having ordered map groups solves this for us:
var goodMap = [
{ UNHAPPY: /happy/ },
{ HAPPY: /happy/ }
];
var mapper = fuzzymap.defineMap(goodMap);
mapper.map("happy"); //returns 'UNHAPPY'
mapper.map("unhappy time"); //returns 'UNHAPPY'
This style is useful for shallow mapping the keys of objects. Unmapped keys are passed through unaltered.
var fuzzymap = require('fuzzymap');
var objectMap = {
AuthorName: [/author/, /author_?name/i],
PIN: ["personal identification number", /pin/i, /p\.i\.n\./i]
};
var object = {
author: "George R. R. Martin",
pin: 12345,
raw: 'value'
};
var mapper = fuzzymap.defineMap(objectMap);
var result = mapper.map(object);
/**
* result == {
* AuthorName: 'George R. R. Martin',
* PIN: 12345,
* raw: 'value'
* };
*
* result === object is true
*/
This style is useful for shallow mapping the keys of objects into a new object. Unmapped keys are excluded from the results; default mapped keys are null.
var fuzzymap = require('fuzzymap');
var objectMap = {
AuthorName: [/author/, /author_?name/i],
PIN: ["personal identification number", /pin/i, /p\.i\.n\./i]
};
var object = {
author: "George R. R. Martin",
};
var mapper = fuzzymap.defineMap(objectMap);
var result = mapper.extract(object);
/**
* result == {
* AuthorName: 'George R. R. Martin',
* PIN: null
* };
*
* result === object is false
*/
Released under the MIT license.
FAQs
fuzzy string matching and mapping
The npm package fuzzymap receives a total of 7 weekly downloads. As such, fuzzymap popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that fuzzymap 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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