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string-replace-async
Advanced tools
A vesion of "string".replace() that knows how to wait
$ npm install string-replace-async
let replaceAsync = require("string-replace-async");
await replaceAsync("#rebeccapurple", /#(\w+)/g, async (match, name) => {
let color = await getColorByName(name);
return "#" + color + " (" + name + ")";
});
Say you have a task of replacing color names with their respective hex codes.
let spec = "I want background to be #papayawhip and borders #rebeccapurple.";
// make it "I want background to be #FFEFD5 (papayawhip) and borders #663399 (rebeccapurple).";
Luckily, strings in JavaScript have this handy replace
method built in, so you use it.
spec.replace(/#(\w+)/g, (match, name) => {
let color = getColorByName(name);
return "#" + color + " (" + name + ")";
});
Time passes, a new requirement emerges: now you have to query a database for custom colors. This is an async operation, so naturally you convert getColorByName
into async function.
Turns out it has a cost: now all the code above should also be async. You try this:
await spec.replace(/#(\w+)/g, async (match, name) => {
let color = await getColorByName(name);
return "#" + color + " (" + name + ")";
});
Unfortunately, this code doesn't work as you expect. Built in menthod wasn't designed to work as async function.
This is where string-replace-async
comes in:
await replaceAsync(spec, /#(\w+)/g, async (match, name) => {
let color = await getColorByName(name);
return "#" + color + " (" + name + ")";
});
Yay!
string-replace-async
is nothing but direct String.prototype.replace
replacement that awaits your function and returns a Promise for results.
API is String.prototype.replace(), except the first argument is a string itself.
Runs replace
and waits for it to resolve before replacing searchValue
with results. If searchValue
is a global RegExp, replace
will be called concurrently for every match.
Type: string
Required
An input string.
Type: regexp
, string
An expression to match substrings to replace.
Type: function
, string
A function
that takes several arguments and returns a promise
. Resolved value will be used as replacement substring.
Previously this module had aditional menhod seq()
that ran replace
functions one by one instead of all at once. We decided to remove it to narrow our scope. Here's a snippet that achieves the same effect:
let sequence = Promise.resolve();
let seq = (fn) => (...args) => (sequence = sequence.then(() => fn(...args)));
await replaceAsync(
"#rebeccapurple, #papayawhip",
/#(\w+)/g,
seq(async (match, name) => {
let color = await getColorByName(name);
return "#" + color + " (" + name + ")";
})
);
MIT © Dmitrii Sobolev
FAQs
Asynchronous String.prototype.replace()
The npm package string-replace-async receives a total of 58,523 weekly downloads. As such, string-replace-async popularity was classified as popular.
We found that string-replace-async 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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