Another Javascript library for iterating.
Pure JavaScript, Iterable/Iterator/Generator-function utilities. No dependencies and shipped with types as is.
Iterators and Iterables in Javascript has basically no supporting methods or functions. This package provides easy to use, lazy evaluation methods to save on memory and unnecessary processing. Support with using the already existing next()
method and usage in "for of" loops, this makes using Iterators as easy as using an Array.
This package can be used like in Python with standalone functions like map, filter, etc. Or be used with method chaining by calling iter which returns an instance of the ExtendedIterator class. Either is supported for however you want to handle iterators.
You can see the full list of modules and the documentation on everything here.
See iteragain-es for the ES modules exported version of this package.
Code examples
const result1 = someArray.map(iteratee).filter(predicate).reduce(reducer);
const result2 = iter(someArray).map(iteratee).filter(predicate).reduce(reducer).toArray();
equal(result1, result2);
import { iter } from 'iteragain';
import iter from 'iteragain/iter';
let nums = iter([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
.map(n => n * n)
.filter(n => n % 2 === 0)
.toArray();
import { map, filter, toArray } from 'iteragain';
nums = toArray(filter(map([1, 2, 3, 4, 5], n => n * n), n => n % 2 === 0));
import range from 'iteragain/range';
range(10).toArray();
range(10, 0).toArray();
range(0, -10).toArray();
range(0, 10, 2).toArray();
let r = range(3);
const nums = [...r, ...r];
r = range(0, 10, 2);
r.length;
r.includes(4);
r.nth(-1);
r.nth(1);
r.nth(10);
r.index(4);
import iter from 'iteragain/iter';
const obj = { a: 1, b: { c: 2, d: { e: 3 }, f: 4 } };
const keys = iter(obj)
.map(([key, _value, _parent]) => key)
.toArray();
Inpired by
iterplus, iterare, lodash, rxjs and the Python itertools and more-itertools modules. See benchmark section for performance against some of these.
Benchmark
Starting benchmark suite: index.bm.ts
for of loop x 2,015 ops/sec, ±47 ops/sec or ±2.33% (90 runs sampled)
iteragain x 1,431 ops/sec, ±25 ops/sec or ±1.74% (92 runs sampled)
iterare x 1,368 ops/sec, ±20 ops/sec or ±1.48% (95 runs sampled)
rxjs x 989 ops/sec, ±10 ops/sec or ±1.05% (93 runs sampled)