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safe-evaluate-expression
Advanced tools
Small library to dynamically create and evaluate expression with multiple parameters (even undefined)
Small library to dynamically create and evaluate expression with multiple parameters (even undefined).
It also offer an ancillary function to protect lambda function to undefined params inputs.
npm install safe-evaluate-expression
const evaluate = require('safe-evaluate-expression');
// Using Simple Text Expression
evaluate('a > 1', { a: 3 }); // -> true
// Using Pseudo JSONLogic Expression
evaluate(
{
and: [
{
operator: 'isLower',
values: [{ value: 1 }, { value: 'a' }],
},
],
},
{ a: 3 }
); // --> true
const evaluate = require('safe-evaluate-expression');
const operators = {
isUndefined: (x) => x === undefined,
isEqual: (a, b) => a === b,
isGreater: (a, b) => a > b,
isLower: (a, b) => a < b,
};
const vars = { a: 1, b: 1, c: 2 };
const params = { ...vars, ...operators };
evaluate('isEqual(a,b)', params); // -> true
evaluate('isEqual(a,c)', params); // -> false
evaluate('isEqual(a,notDefined)', params); // -> false
evaluate('isUndefined(a)', params); // -> false
evaluate('isUndefined(notDefined)', params); // -> true
// It works also with infinite nested conditions
evaluate('(isUndefined(notDefined) || (isGreater(c, a) && isLower(b, c))) && isEqual(a,1)', params); // -> true
const { factory, operators } = require('safe-evaluate-expression');
const evaluate = factory({ operators, multipleParams: true, translateLogical: true });
const metadata = { x: 1.1, y: 2 };
const list = { k: 3, z: 4 };
const map = new Map([['pi', 3.14]]);
const expression1 = 'isLower(x,z)';
const expression2 = 'isLower(k,y)';
const expression3 = 'isLower(notDefined,z)'; // put a not defined value
const pseudoJSONLogic = {
and: [
{ operator: '!isEmpty', values: [{ value: '"lorem"' }] },
{
or: [
{
operator: 'isEqual',
values: [{ value: 'x' }, { value: '"x"' }],
},
{
operator: 'isLower',
values: [{ value: '3' }, { value: '4' }],
},
],
},
],
};
evaluate(expression1, metadata, list); // -> true
evaluate(expression2, metadata, list); // -> false
evaluate(`${expression1} AND ${expression2}`, metadata, list); // -> false
evaluate(`${expression1} OR ${expression2}`, metadata, list); // -> true
evaluate(expression3, metadata, list);
evaluate(`${expression3} AND ${expression2}`, metadata, list); // -> false
evaluate(`(isLower(x,z) AND isLower(k,y) OR (isLower(z,P) AND NOT isLower(P,k)))`, metadata, list);
evaluate(`isLower(z,pi)`, metadata, list, map); // -> false
evaluate(pseudoJSONLogic, metadata, list, map); // -> true
The Factory used without parameters gives the same results as the "evaluate" function. However, it is possible to create new "evaluate" functions with much more spice by setting the Factory parameters correctly. All parameters are optional. The parameter "multipleParams" allows you to pass various objects (or Maps) to the evaluation function, thus avoiding the need to deconstruct operators and values in a single object. It is important to remember that the parameter "operators", if specified, must contain an object with all the functions you want to define as operators. This object can be plugged in-scope within the evaluation function to optimise performance. However, if the "operators" functions depend on the external libraries, you should not set the "operatorsInScope" functionality.
Param | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
multipleParams | Define if evaluate function will take a single object as params (default - eg. eval("espression",{})) or if it takes multiple params (eg. eval("espression", param1, param2, ...)) | false |
operatorsInScope | Define if operators object is converted inline to have all the operators directly in the scope of the evaluation expression. If true the operators are putted in the expression context as: const [operatorName] = [operator]. Otherwise operators are passed thru as a single object while all operators logic inside expression are automatically prefixed. In general: use operatorsInScope = true if you use operators without external dependencies. If you use third party libraries to handle operators logic you must pass operators as an object. | false |
translateLogical | Determine if translate "AND", "OR" and "NOT" words inside expression. If true all the logical operators are converted accordingly (eg. "AND" -> &&) | false |
operators | Object containing all the operators function you want to use to evaluate expression (eg. { isEqual: (a,b) => a === b }). For convenience the library export a small set of default operators. | |
undef | An optional parameter to specify the value to be returned when expression occurs in undefined params. | undefined |
Protect lambda function by assigning a default value for undefined input paramters.
const { safeLambda } = require('safe-evaluate-expression');
const lambda = (a, b, c) => a + b + c;
const protectedLambda = safeLambda(lambda, 0);
// The unprotected lambda returns NaN because all values are undefined
// The protected one return zero (default): 0 + 0 + 0
console.log(lambda(), protectedLambda()); // -> NaN 0
FAQs
Small library to dynamically create and evaluate expression with multiple parameters (even undefined)
The npm package safe-evaluate-expression receives a total of 105 weekly downloads. As such, safe-evaluate-expression popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that safe-evaluate-expression 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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