Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

wodge

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
36
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

wodge

a wodge of functional dough

  • 0.6.3
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
6
decreased by-97.18%
Maintainers
1
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

view on npm npm module downloads per month Dependency Status Analytics

browser support

#wodge A collection of useful functions.

#API Documentation Generated jsdoc documentation.

##extend Merge a list of objects, left to right, into one.

###Parameters object {Object} - a sequence of Object instances to be extended

###Example

> w.extend({}, { one: 1, three: 3 }, { one: "one", two: 2 }, { four: 4 });
{ one: 'one',
  three: 3,
  two: 2,
  four: 4 }

##clone Clones an object or array

###Parameters input {Object,Array} - the input to clone

###Example

> date = new Date()
Fri May 09 2014 13:54:34 GMT+0200 (CEST)
> w.clone(date)
{}  // a Date instance doensn't own any properties
> date.clive = "hater"
'hater'
> w.clone(date)
{ clive: 'hater' }
> array = [1,2,3]
[ 1, 2, 3 ]
> newArray = w.clone(array)
[ 1, 2, 3 ]
> array === newArray
false

Returns Object,Array

##omit Returns a clone of the input object, minus the specified properties

###Parameters object {Object} - the object to clone
toOmit {string[]} - an array of property names to omit from the clone

###Example

> w.omit({ one: 1, two: 2, three: 3, four: 4 }, [ "two", "four" ]);
{ one: 1, three: 3 }

Returns Object

##escapeRegExp escape special regular expression characters

###Example

> w.escapeRegExp("(.*)");
'\\(\\.\\*\\)'

##pluck Plucks the value of the specified property from each object in the input array

###Parameters arrayOfObjects {Object[]} - the input array of objects
the {string} - property to pluck

###Example

> var data = [
...     {one: 1, two: 2},
...     {two: "two"},
...     {one: "one", two: "zwei"},
... ];
undefined
> w.pluck(data, "one");
[ 1, 'one' ]
> w.pluck(data, "two");
[ 2, 'two', 'zwei' ]
> w.pluck(data, "one", "two");
[ 1, 'two', 'one' ]

Returns Array

##isNumber Returns true if input is a number

###Example

> w.isNumber(0)
true
> w.isNumber(1)
true
> w.isNumber(1.1)
true
> w.isNumber(0xff)
true
> w.isNumber(0644)
true
> w.isNumber(6.2e5)
true
> w.isNumber(a)
false
> w.isNumber(NaN)
false
> w.isNumber(Infinity)
false

##isPlainObject Returns true if input type is object and not an Array

###Parameters input {*} - the input to test

###Example

> w.isPlainObject(new Date())
true
> w.isPlainObject({ clive: "hater" })
true
> w.isPlainObject([ 0, 1 ])
false

Returns boolean

##arrayify Takes input and guarantees an array back. Result can be one of three things:

  • puts a single scalar in an array
  • converts array-like object (e.g. arguments) to a real array
  • converts null or undefined to an empty array

###Parameters input {*} - the input value to convert to an array

###Example

> w.arrayify(null)
[]
> w.arrayify(0)
[ 0 ]
> w.arrayify([ 1, 2 ])
[ 1, 2 ]
> function f(){ return w.arrayify(arguments); }
undefined
> f(1,2,3)
[ 1, 2, 3 ]

Returns Array

##every Returns true if the supplied iterator function returns true for every property in the object

###Parameters object {Object} - the object to inspect
iterator {function} - the iterator function to run against each key/value pair, the args are (value, key).

###Example

> function aboveTen(input){ return input > 10; }
undefined
> w.every({ eggs: 12, carrots: 30, peas: 100 }, aboveTen)
true
> w.every({ eggs: 6, carrots: 30, peas: 100 }, aboveTen)
false

Returns Boolean

##each Runs the iterator function against every key/value pair in the input object

###Parameters object {Object} - the object to iterate
callback {function} - the iterator function to run against each key/value pair, the args are (value, key).

###Example

> var total = 0;
undefined
> function addToTotal(n){ total += n; }
undefined
> w.each({ eggs: 3, celery: 2, carrots: 1 }, addToTotal)
undefined
> total
6

##bytesToSize Convert bytes to human-readable size

###Parameters bytes {number} - the bytes value to convert
precision {number} - number of decimal places optional default=0

###Example

> w.bytesToSize(10000)
'10 KB'
> w.bytesToSize(10000, 1)
'9.8 KB'
> w.bytesToSize(10000, 2)
'9.77 KB'
> w.bytesToSize(10000, 3)
'9.766 KB'

Returns string

##getHomeDir Cross-platform home directory retriever

###Example

> w.getHomeDir()
'/Users/Lloyd'

##fill Create a new string filled with the supplied character

###Parameters fillWith {string} - the fill character
len {number} - the length of the output string

###Example

> w.fill("a", 10)
'aaaaaaaaaa'
> w.fill("ab", 10)
'aaaaaaaaaa'

Returns string

##padRight Add padding to the right of a string

###Parameters input {string} - the string to pad
width {number} - the desired final width
padWith {string} - the padding character optional default=" "

###Example

> w.padRight("clive", 1)
'clive'
> w.padRight("clive", 1, "-")
'clive'
> w.padRight("clive", 10, "-")
'clive-----'

Returns string

##exists returns true if a value, or nested object value exists in an array

###Parameters array {Array} - the array to search
value {*} - the value to search for

###Example

> w.exists([ 1, 2, 3 ], 2)
true
> w.exists([ { result: false }, { result: false } ], { result: true })
false
> w.exists([ { result: true }, { result: false } ], { result: true })
true
> w.exists([ { result: true }, { result: true } ], { result: true })
true

Returns boolean

##without Returns the input array, minus the specied values

###Parameters array {Array} - the input array
toRemove {*} - a single, or array of values to omit

###Example

> w.without([ 1, 2, 3 ], 2)
[ 1, 3 ]
> w.without([ 1, 2, 3 ], [ 2, 3 ])
[ 1 ]

Returns Array

##first Returns the first object in the input array with property set to value.

###Parameters objectArray {Object[]} - input array of objects
prop {string} - property to inspect
val {*} - desired value

###Example

> w.first([{ product: "egg", stock: true }, { product: "chicken", stock: true }], "stock", true)
{ product: 'egg', stock: true }
> w.first([{ product: "egg", stock: true }, { product: "chicken", stock: true }], "stock", false)
undefined

Returns Object,undefined

##commonDir commonDir returns the directory common to each path in the list

###Parameters files {Array} - An array of file paths to inspect

###Example

> files = fs.readdirSync(".").map(function(file){ return path.resolve(file); })
[ '/Users/Lloyd/Documents/75lb/wodge/.DS_Store',
  '/Users/Lloyd/Documents/75lb/wodge/.git',
  '/Users/Lloyd/Documents/75lb/wodge/.gitignore',
  '/Users/Lloyd/Documents/75lb/wodge/.jshintrc',
  '/Users/Lloyd/Documents/75lb/wodge/README.md',
  '/Users/Lloyd/Documents/75lb/wodge/lib',
  '/Users/Lloyd/Documents/75lb/wodge/node_modules',
  '/Users/Lloyd/Documents/75lb/wodge/package.json',
  '/Users/Lloyd/Documents/75lb/wodge/test' ]
> w.commonDir(files)
'/Users/Lloyd/Documents/75lb/wodge/'

Returns string - A single path ending with the path separator, e.g. "/user/some/folder/"

##union merge two arrays into a single array of unique values

###Example

> var array1 = [ 1, 2 ], array2 = [ 2, 3 ];
undefined
> w.union(array1, array2)
[ 1, 2, 3 ]
> var array1 = [ { id: 1 }, { id: 2 } ], array2 = [ { id: 2 }, { id: 3 } ];
undefined
> w.union(array1, array2)
[ { id: 1 }, { id: 2 }, { id: 3 } ]
> var array2 = [ { id: 2, blah: true }, { id: 3 } ]
undefined
> w.union(array1, array2)
[ { id: 1 },
  { id: 2 },
  { id: 2, blah: true },
  { id: 3 } ]
> w.union(array1, array2, "id")
[ { id: 1 }, { id: 2 }, { id: 3 } ]

##commonSequence Returns the initial elements which both input arrays have in common

###Parameters a {Array} - first array to compare
b {Array} - second array to compare

###Example

> w.commonSequence([1,2,3], [1,2,4])
[ 1, 2 ]

Returns Array

##escapeForJSON strips special characters, making suitable for storage in a JS/JSON string

###Parameters input {string} - the input

###Example

> w.escapeForJSON("hello\nthere")
'hello\\nthere'

Returns string

FAQs

Package last updated on 09 May 2014

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc