A pattern matching DSL for JavaScript. The module is a function that
takes an arbitrary JavaScript value and tests it against a
pattern. If the match succeeds, the result is a sub-match object,
which consists of the sub-components of the value that matched named
sub-patterns (using the var
pattern). If the match fails, a
MatchError
is thrown.
Here's a simple example of using pattern matching to analyze an AST for a hypothetical language:
var match = require('pattern-match');
match(ast, function(when) {
when({
type: 'FunctionCall',
callee: match.var('callee'),
args: match.var('args')
}, function(vars) {
this.analyzeFunctionCall(vars.callee, vars.args);
}, this);
when({
type: 'Assignment',
lhs: match.var('lhs'),
rhs: match.var('rhs')
}, function(vars) {
this.analyzeAssignment(vars.lhs, vars.rhs);
}, this);
when({
type: 'Return',
arg: match.var('arg')
}, function(vars) {
this.analyzeReturn(vars.arg);
}, this);
}, this);
This will get sweeter in ES6 with destructuring:
var match = require('pattern-match');
match(ast, function(when) {
when({
type: 'FunctionCall',
callee: match.var('callee'),
args: match.var('args')
}, function({ callee, args }) {
this.analyzeFunctionCall(callee, args);
}, this);
when({
type: 'Assignment',
lhs: match.var('lhs'),
rhs: match.var('rhs')
}, function({ lhs, rhs }) {
this.analyzeAssignment(lhs, rhs);
}, this);
when({
type: 'Return',
arg: match.var('arg')
}, function({ arg }) {
this.analyzeReturn(arg);
}, this);
}, this);
And sweeter still with ES6 arrow-functions:
var match = require('pattern-match');
match(ast, (when) => {
when({
type: 'FunctionCall',
callee: match.var('callee'),
args: match.var('args')
}, ({ callee, args }) => {
this.analyzeFunctionCall(callee, args);
});
when({
type: 'Assignment',
lhs: match.var('lhs'),
rhs: match.var('rhs')
}, ({ lhs, rhs }) => {
this.analyzeAssignment(lhs, rhs);
});
when({
type: 'Return',
arg: match.var('arg')
}, ({ arg }) => {
this.analyzeReturn(arg);
});
});
- match(x, body[, thisArg])
Match x
against a sequence of patterns, returning the result of the
first successful match. The cases are provided by the body
function:
- body.call(thisArg, when)
Provides the cases by calling when
in the order the cases should be
tried. The library calls body
with the thisArg
provided to match
as the binding of this
.
- when(pattern[, template[, thisArg]])
Provides the next case, consisting of a pattern an optional
template. If matching the pattern succeeds, the result is passed to
template
with thisArg
bound to this
(defaults to the global
object). If template
is not provided, this case produces the
sub-match object.
- match(x).when(pattern[, template[, thisArg]])
Match x
against a single pattern. Returns the result of calling
template
on the sub-match object with thisArg
(or the global
object by default) as the binding of this
. If template
is not
provided, returns the sub-match object.
- match.any - matches any value.
- match.primitive - matches any primitive (non-object) value.
- match.object - matches any non-null object.
- match.array - matches anything
Array.isArray
matches. - match.function - assumes the pattern is a boolean-valued function and matches any value for which the function returns true.
- match.null - matches the
null
value. - match.undefined - matches the
undefined
value. - match.boolean - matches any boolean value.
- match.number - matches any number value.
- match.int32 - matches any integral number value in the range [-2^31, 2^31).
- match.uint32 - matches any integral number value in the range [0, 2^32).
- match.integer - matches any integral number value, including -Infinity and Infinity.
- match.finite - matches any number value other than NaN, -Infinity, and Infinity.
- match.infinite - matches -Infinity and Infinity.
- match.negative - matches any number less than 0.
- match.positive - matches any number greater than 0.
- match.nonnegative - matches any number greater than or equal to 0 (including -0, which most of the time should just be considered 0).
- match.plusZero - matches only +0 (and not -0). If you don't know if you need this, don't use it.
- match.minusZero - matches only -0 (and not +0). If you don't know if you need this, don't use it.
- match.range(low, high) - matches any number value in the half-open range [
low
,high
). - match.string - matches any string value.
- match.var(name[, pattern]) - matches the
pattern
(defaults toany
) and saves the value in the sub-match object with property namename
. - match.all(pattern, ...) - matches if every
pattern
matches. - match.some(pattern, ...) - matches if one
pattern
matches. - pred(testValue) - matches any value for which
pred
returns a truthy value. - { x1: pattern1, ..., xn: patternn } - matches any object with property names
x1
toxn
matching patternspattern1
topatternn
, respectively. Only the own properties of the pattern are used. - [ pattern0, ..., patternn ] - matches any object with property names 0 to n matching patterns
pattern0
topatternn
, respectively.
You can create custom patterns by extending the root pattern prototype.
- match.pattern - the root pattern prototype.
- match.MatchError - an object extending
Error
that represents a failed pattern-match.- e.expected - the expected pattern.
- e.actual - the actual value tested.