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prototypes

Some common prototypes for node.js: string.startsWith(), object.countProperties() and more. Facilities for functional programming with objects: object.forEach(), object.filter(). Functions are added safely using Object.defineProperty().

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prototypes

Some common prototypes for node.js: string.startsWith(), object.countProperties() and more. Functions are added using Object.defineProperty() to avoid polluting new objects.

Includes nice facilities for functional programming with objects: object.forEach(), object.filterIn() and so on.

Warning: does not play well with current Node.js versions. Please do not use in any new projects.

Installation

Simply install using npm:

npm install prototypes

Or add to the dependencies of your project in your package.json.

Compatibility

Compatibility with Node.js v6 or earlier was broken in 3.0.0:

  • Node.js v8 or later: ^3.0.0.
  • Node.js v6 or earlier: ^2.3.5.

Usage

This package adds some useful prototypes to String, Object and Array. To use in your package, you just have to require prototypes:

require('prototypes');

There is no need to assign the result to any variable, since the prototypes are added automatically. It may in fact result in a warning in JSHint or similar code checkers.

Special care has been taken to avoid nasty interactions with other libraries: the new function prototypes don't appear in enumerations and can be overwritten in your own code.

String Prototypes

The following string prototypes are provided.

string.startsWith(str)

Check that the current string starts with the given substring. Example:

'pepitus'.startsWith('pep');
//=> true

string.endsWith(str)

Check that the current string ends with the given substring. Example:

'pepitus'.endsWith('tus');
//=> true

string.substringUpTo(str)

Return the piece of string until the argument is found; return the whole string if not found. Example:

'hi.there'.substringUpTo('.');
//=> 'hi'

string.substringUpToLast(str)

Return the piece of string until the last occurrence of the argument; return the whole string if not found. Example:

'hi.there.you'.substringUpToLast('.');
//=> 'hi.there'

string.substringFrom(str)

Return the piece of string starting with the argument; empty string if not found. Example:

'hi.there'.substringFrom('.');
//=> 'there'

string.substringFromLast(str)

Return the piece from the last occurrence of the argument; empty string if not found. Example:

'hi.there.you'.substringFromLast('.');
//=> 'you'

string.contains(str)

Find out if the string contains the argument at any position. Case-sensitive. Example:

'abcde'.contains('bcd');
//=> true

string.containsIgnoreCase(str)

Find out if the string contains the argument at any position, case-insensitive. Example:

'aBcDe'.containsIgnoreCase('bCd');
//=> true

string.replaceAll(str, replacement)

Replace all occurrences of a string with the replacement. Example:

'pepitus'.replaceAll('p', 'c');
//=> 'cecitus'

string.replaceIgnoreCase(str, replacement)

Replace the first occurrence of a string ignoring case with the replacement. Example:

'Pepitus'.replaceAll('p', 'c');
//=> 'cecitus'

string.replaceAllIgnoreCase(str, replacement)

Replace all occurrences of a string with the replacement, ignoring case. Example:

'Pepitus'.replaceAll('p', 'cor');
//=> 'corecoritus'

string.repeat(number)

Repeat the given string a few times. Example:

'ab'.repeat(3);
//=> 'ababab'

string.capitalize()

Capitalize a string: first letter upper case, rest as is. Example:

'hello'.capitalize();
//=> 'Hello'

string.format()

Format a string using the same convention as util.format(): %s represents a string value, %j converts to JSON, and so on. Example:

'Hi %s, %j'.format('a', {});
//=> 'Hi a, {}'

string.escapeForWeb()

Web safe escape. Escapes everything that escape does, and also the plus sign, asterisk and slash. Example:

'Hi, my name is Pepíto'.escapeForWeb();
  \=> 'Hi%2C%20my%20name%20is%20Pep%EDto'

string.unescapeForWeb()

Unescapes everything that unescape does, and also "+", "*" and "/", and can also be applied on the result more than once without generating URIError: URI malformed as decodeURIComponent() does. Example:

'Hi%2C%20my%20name%20is%20Pep%EDto'.unescapeForWeb();
  //=> 'Hi, my name is Pepíto'

string.hashCode()

Implement a hash code prototype for a string. Based on Manwe's function. Example:

'Hi, my name is Pepíto'.hashCode();
  //=> 1239770349

string.pad()

Pads a string to the desired length, with the given character. Example:

'8'.pad(2, '0');
//=> '08'

String.createToken(value)

Generate a new unique token in base36 (alphanumerical lowercase characters). It uses a random value and the current date, and optionally the given parameter. Should be quite strong, even if not cryptographically so. Example:

String.createToken();
//=> 'dqna29cy639ekxtfiprdpg72h'

Note: this function resides in the Array global like Array.isArray(), instead of in individual arrays as the previous functions. In versions up to 0.3.4 there were functions object.toArray() and object.isArray(), but they were removed due to incompatibilities with lodash.

Object Prototypes

For objects some care must be taken before overwriting Object.prototype: otherwise it might break all code that does not check for hasOwnProperty(). See MDN help. In this library all extensions are done using Object.defineProperty() which does not pollute objects as the new properties are not enumerable. Again, see MDN help.

object.countProperties(filter)

Count the number of properties in an object. Does not count inherited properties: uses Object.keys(). Example:

{a: 'a'}.countProperties();
//=> 1

You can also pass a string or a function as a filter:

{hello: 'a'}.countProperties('ll');
//=> 1

{hello: 'a'}.countProperties(function(key) { return key.length == 5 });
//=> 1

object.hasProperties()

Simply find out if the object has any properties at all. Most of the time you just want to see if you have an empty object; this function is for you! Faster than counting all properties. Does not count inherited properties: uses hasOwnProperty(). Example:

{hello: 'a'}.hasProperties();
//=> true

{}.hasProperties();
//=> false

Common usage:

var params = JSON.parse(string);
if (!params.hasProperties()) return;

object.overwriteWith(overwriter)

Overwrite properties in the original with the given object. Example:

{a: 'a'}.overwriteWith({b: 'b'});
//=> {a: 'a', b: 'b'}

Note: properties which are undefined are not overwritten; all others (including null) are. For instance:

{a: 'a'}.overwriteWith({b: undefined, c: null});
//=> {a: 'a', c: null}

object.concat(otherObject)

Return a new object that includes properties of the object and the other object. Does not modify the original object. Example:

{a: 'a'}.concat({b: 'b'});
//=> {a: 'a', b: 'b'}

object.forEach(callback)

Call the callback for every value of the object. Similar to array.forEach(), the callback will receive three parameters: value, key and the object itself. Example:

{a: 1, b: 2}.forEach(function(value, key) {
  console.log(key + ': ' + value);
});
//=> a: 1
//=> b: 2

object.filterIn(callback)

Return a new object that only includes those properties of the object that return true for the given callback, i.e.: callback(value) == true. Does not modify the original object. Works also on arrays, equivalent to array.filter(). Example:

{a: 1, b: 2}.filterIn(function(value) {
  return value > 1;
});
//=> {b: 2}

object.filterOut(callback)

Return a new object that only includes those properties of the object that return false for the given callback, i.e.: callback(value) != true. Does not modify the original object. Works also on arrays. Example:

{a: 1, b: 2}.filterOut(function(value) {
    return value > 1;
});
//=> {a: 1}

object.renameProperties(mappingObject)

Rename an object's properties based on another 'mapping' object's key/value pairs. Example:

{a: 1, b: 2}.renameProperties({a: 'z', b: 'y'});
//=> {z: 1, y: 2}

Object Functions

Functions added to Object are available to operate on parameter objects.

Object.values(object)

Get an array with all values in the object. Example:

Object.values({first: 'a', second: 'b'});
//=> ['a', 'b']

Array Prototypes

The following array prototypes are provided.

array.contains(element)

Check if the array contains the given element. Example:

['a', 'b'].contains('a');
//=> true

array.remove(element)

Remove the element from the array if present, and return it. If not present, returns null. Example:

var array = ['a', 'b'];
array.remove('a');
//=> 'a'

array
//=> ['b']

array.filterIn(checker)

Inherited from object.filterIn(checker), works also on arrays. Identical to array.filter(checker).

array.filterOut(checker)

Inherited from object.filterIn(checker), works also on arrays. Similar to array.filter() but reversed. Example:

['a', 'b', 'c1', 'c2'].filterOut(function(element) {
  return element.startsWith('c');
});
//=> ['a', 'b']

array.unique()

Returns a new array of unique elements. Throws out null and undefined elements. Example:

['c', 'a', 'b', 'c', 'b'].unique();
//=> ['c', 'a', 'b']

Note: Up to versions 1.1.x array.unique() returned a sorted array. However, nothing in the function name suggested this to be the case, which could (and did) lead to confusion. As of 1.2.0, that is no longer the case: array.unique() returns elements in the same order as the original array.

array.first()

Returns the first element of an array, or undefined for an empty array. If a condition is passed, returns the first element that satisfies the condition. Examples:

['a', 'b', 'c'].first();
//=> 'a'

['aa', 'b', 'c'].first(function(element) {
	return element.length == 1;
});
//=> 'b'

array.last()

Returns the last element of an array, or undefined for an empty array. If a condition is passed, returns the first element that satisfies the condition. Example:

['a', 'b', 'c'].last();
//=> 'c'

['aa', 'b', 'c'].last(function(element) {
	return element.length == 1;
});
//=> 'c'

array.concatAll()

Flattens just one level of nested array. Example:

[1, 2, [3, 4, [5, 6]]].concatAll();
//=> [1, 2, 3, 4, [5, 6]]

array.flatten()

Flattens all levels of nested arrays. Example:

[1, 2, [3, 4, [5, 6]]].concatAll();
//=> [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]

Array.toArray(object)

Return an array with the object property values. If already an array, returns the unmodified array. Example:

Array.toArray({a: 1, b: 2});
//=> [1, 2]

Note: this function resides in the Array global like Array.isArray(), instead of in individual arrays as the previous functions. In versions up to 0.3.4 there were functions object.toArray() and object.isArray(), but they were removed due to incompatibilities with lodash.

There are math functions in Math, in Number.prototype, exported isNumber and even as globals, e.g. parseInt().

parseInt(string)

By default parseInt() requires a radix (or base), or it will recreate the radix itself: if the string starts with a leading zero, then it interprets that you are parsing an octal number.

// unsafe parseInt()
parseInt('010');
//=> 8

This library replaces the global function with a safe version that uses radix 10 unless told otherwise. The last person that wanted to convert octal with leading zeroes is probably programming in C anyway. Example:

parseInt('010');
//=> 10

isNumber(value)

The function isNumber() is based on this StackOverflow answer: it checks if the parameter is a number. Examples:

var prototypes = require('prototypes');

prototypes.isNumber(5);
//=> true

prototypes.isNumber('hi');
//=> false

Math.log10(number)

Logarithm in base 10. Example:

Math.log10(10);
//=> 1

number.toRad()

Convert a number in degrees to radians. Example:

var n = 180;

n.toRad();
//=> 3.141592653589793

RegExp Prototypes

Prototypes used to enhance regular expressions (the RegExp prototype). Can also be used with the syntax /.../.

makeGlobal()

Returns a new regular expression which is always global. Example:

'pepitus'.replace(/p/.makeGlobal(), 'c');
//=> 'cecitus'

Acknowledgements

Thanks to my previous employer MediaSmart Mobile for their permission to reuse some of the prototypes we have cooked together.

Thanks to William Wicks for letting me (even encouraging me to) plunder his extensions library.

License

This package is published under the MIT license. You can integrate it in any commercial, closed software and/or make changes to the code with complete liberty. If you send your changes back to the main repo we will be grateful, but it is by no means required.

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Package last updated on 11 Dec 2020

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