A library built for ES6 iteration protocol.
function* numbers() {
let n = 1;
while (true) {
yield n++;
}
}
const s = itiriri(numbers()).map(n => 1 / (n * n)).take(1000).sum();
console.log(Math.sqrt(6 * s));
// 3.1406380562059946
itiriri provides similar functions as JavaScript arrays: filter, slice, map, reduce, every, some etc. and more. The functions are optimized for ES6 iterators and can be chained to perform simple but powerful manipulations over iterables.
$ npm install 'itiriri' --save
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
The itiriri library can be used with any ES6 compatible runtime.
itiriri can be used with a build-it type like array, Map, Set, a generator function or a custom iterable.
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
const values = [2, 0, 4, 8];
const s = itiriri(values).map(n => n / 2).reverse();
console.log(s.toString()); // prints: 4,2,0,1
// prints: 4 2 0 1
for (const n of s) {
console.log(n)
}
console.log(s.sum()); // prints: 7
JavaScript's array methods like filter, slice and others that return an array create a shallow copy for the result and are executed once called.
itiriri functions that return iterables are not executed unless chained with a function that reduces a value or transforms to a built-in type. The iterable source is iterated only once.
Let's see what happens in the below example.
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
function* fibonacci() {
let [a, b] = [0, 1];
while (true) {
yield a;
[a, b] = [b, a + b];
}
}
// Finding first 3 Fibonacci numbers that contain 42
const result = itiriri(fibonacci())
.filter(x => x.toString().indexOf('42') !== -1)
.take(3);
for (const e of result) {
console.log(e);
}
// outputs: 514229, 267914296, 7778742049
Step by step:
-
result
is assigned to a itiriri. At this pointnumbers
array is not iterated, the execution is deferred until the result is being iterated. -
filter
method creates an iterator to pipe only numbers passing the predicate.filter
does not buffer elements and only pipes them one-by-one totake
as it is iterated. -
take
pipes only first three elements as it is iterated and breaks. -
for...of
instruction starts iteration and requests elements one at a time.
Due to deferred execution, most of the functions that don't need entire sequence of elements to build an iterator (like filter, map, concat etc.) can be used with infinite iterables (like Fibonacci in the above example). These functions are also optimized to pass elements through and do not buffer them resulting in a more optimized memory usage.
Functions like sort, reverse, shuffle etc. that require entire sequence of elements in order to build an iterator expect to receive a finite iterable.
Using itiriri
is considerable faster than using array methods when processing large inputs.
In filter-map-slice example arrays of different size are used to filter and map a result of 100 elements:
Array size (N) | array |
itiriri |
---|---|---|
1000 | 111,611 ops/sec ±9.63% (86 runs) | 44,213 ops/sec ±1.92% (88 runs) |
5000 | 18,507 ops/sec ±0.67% (90 runs) | 42,103 ops/sec ±2.63% (84 runs) |
10000 | 8,655 ops/sec ±0.70% (91 runs) | 42,803 ops/sec ±2.20% (86 runs) |
50000 | 1,640 ops/sec ±0.79% (88 runs) | 43,446 ops/sec ±2.17% (88 runs) |
100000 | 848 ops/sec ±0.93% (87 runs) | 43,137 ops/sec ±2.15% (87 runs) |
200000 | 46.38 ops/sec ±0.74% (59 runs) | 42,445 ops/sec ±2.48% (90 runs) |
Using array
methods performance drops significantly for large inputs due to creation of intermediary states for filter
and map
.
Using itiriri
iteration always stops after 100 elements are found, therefore the size of the input doesn't affect the performance.
More benchmarks can be found in /benchmark.
$ npm install
$ npm test
If you want to use itiriri in the browser, there is a gulp
task that creates a minified file:
$ npm install
$ gulp bundle
// creates itiriri.min.js file in the root folder
Once you include the itiriri.min.js
file on your page, you can use it as:
<script src="itiriri.min.js"></script>
<!-- ... -->
<script>
// source can be an array or an Iterable
const source = [1, 2, 3];
console.log(itiriri(source).sum());
</script>
- average
- concat
- distinct
- entries
- every
- exclude
- fill
- filter
- find
- findIndex
- findLast
- findLastIndex
- first
- flat
- forEach
- groupBy
- groupJoin
- includes
- indexOf
- intersect
- join
- keys
- last
- lastIndexOf
- leftJoin
- length
- map
- max
- min
- nth
- prepend
- reduce
- reduceRight
- reverse
- rightJoin
- shuffle
- skip
- skipWhile
- slice
- some
- sort
- splice
- sum
- take
- takeWhile
- toArray
- toGroups
- toMap
- toSet
- toString
- union
- values
Returns the average value.
Syntax
average(): number;
average(selector: (element: T, index: number) => number): number;
Parameters
selector
- (optional) a value transformer that accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns a number that is used for average value calculation
For a sequence with no elements returns undefined
.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([41, 42, 43]).average() // returns 42
itiriri([{value: 1}, {value: 2}]).average(elem => elem.value) // returns 1.5
itiriri([]).average() // returns undefined
Concatenates a sequence with another one.
Syntax
concat(other: Iterable<T>): IterableQuery<T>;
concat(other: T): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
other
- (required) a sequence or a value to be concatenated
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).concat([4, 5]).toArray() // returns [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
concat
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns a sequence of unique elements.
Syntax
distinct(): IterableQuery<T>;
distinct<S>(selector: (element: T) => S): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
selector
- (optional) a function to get element's value for comparison. Accepts one argument:element
- current element- returns a value to be used for comparison
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 42, 3, 4, 1]).distinct().toArray(); // returns [1, 42, 3, 4]
itiriri([{value: 1}, {value: 2}, {value: 1}])
.distinct(elem => elem.value)
.toArray(); // returns [{value: 1}, {value: 2}]
distinct
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns a sequence of key/value pair for each element and its index.
Syntax
entries(): IterableQuery<[number, T]>;
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri(['Alice', 'Bob', 'David']).entries().toArray();
// returns [[0, 'Alice'], [1, 'Bob'], [2, 'David']]
entries
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Tests whether all the elements pass the predicate.
Syntax
every(predicate: (element: T, index: number) => boolean): boolean;
Parameters
predicate
- (required) function to test for each elementelement
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns
true
orfalse
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([2, 4, 9]).every(elem => elem > 0); // returns true
itiriri([7, 23, 3]).every(elem => elem % 3 === 0); // returns false
Returns a sequence of elements not contained in a given sequence.
Syntax
exclude<S>(others: Iterable<T>): IterableQuery<T>;
exclude<S>(others: Iterable<T>, selector: (element: T) => S): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
others
- (required) a sequence of elements to be excludedselector
- (optional) a function to get element's value for comparison, accepts one argument:element
- current element- returns a value to be used for comparison
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([2, 0, 1, 8, 2]).exclude([0, 1]).toArray(); // returns [2, 8, 2]
itiriri([{id: 1}, {id: 2}])
.exclude([{id: 2}, elem => elem.id])
.toArray(); // returns [{id: 1}]
exclude
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns a sequence filled from a start index to an end index with a static value. The end index is not included.
Syntax
fill(value: T): IterableQuery<T>;
fill(value: T, start: number): IterableQuery<T>;
fill(value: T, start: number, end: number): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
value
- (required) value to fillstart
- (optional) start index, defaults to 0end
- (optional) end index, defaults to sequence length
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).fill([7]).toArray(); // returns [7, 7, 7, 7, 7]
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).fill([7, 3]).toArray(); // returns [1, 2, 3, 7, 7]
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).fill([7, 1, 3]).toArray(); // returns [1, 7, 7, 4, 5]
fill
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns a sequence of elements that pass the predicate.
Syntax
filter(predicate: (element: T, index: number) => boolean): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
predicate
- (required) function to test for each element that accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns
true
orfalse
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).filter(elem => elem < 3).toArray(); // returns [1, 2]
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).filter(elem > 10).toArray(); // returns []
filter
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Finds the first element that satisfies the specified predicate.
Syntax
find(predicate: (element: T, index: number) => boolean): T;
Parameters
predicate
- (required) function to test for each element, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns
true
if element satisfies the predicate,false
otherwise
If no element satisfies the predicate, returns undefined
.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).find(elem => elem % 2 === 0); // returns 2
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).find(elem > 10); // returns undefined
Finds the first index at which a given element satisfies the specified predicate.
Syntax
findIndex(predicate: (element: T, index: number) => boolean): number;
Parameters
predicate
- (required) function to test for each element, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns
true
if element satisfies the predicate,false
otherwise
If no element satisfies the predicate, returns -1
.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([7, 12, 15]).findIndex(elem => elem > 10 && elem < 15); // returns 1
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).findIndex(elem > 10); // returns -1
Finds the last element that satisfies the specified predicate.
Syntax
findLast(predicate: (element: T, index: number) => boolean): T;
Parameters
predicate
- (required) function to test for each element, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns
true
if element satisfies the predicate,false
otherwise
If no element satisfies the predicate, returns undefined
.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([11, 7, 21]).findLast(elem => elem > 10); // returns 21
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).findLast(elem > 10); // returns undefined
Finds the last index at which a given element satisfies the specified predicate.
Syntax
findLastIndex(predicate: (element: T, index: number) => boolean): number;
Parameters
predicate
- (required) function to test for each element, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns
true
if element satisfies the predicate,false
otherwise
If not present, returns -1
.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([11, 7, 21]).findLastIndex(elem => elem > 10); // returns 2
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).findLastIndex(elem > 10); // returns -1
Returns the first element in a sequence.
Syntax
first(): T;
For an empty sequence returns undefined
.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri(['a', 'b', 'c']).first(); // returns 'a'
itiriri([]).first(); // returns undefined
Returns a sequence with all sub-sequences concatenated.
Syntax
flat<S>(selector: (element: T, index: number) => Iterable<S>): IterableQuery<S>;
Parameters
selector
- (required) a transformation function to map each element to a sequence, accepts two argumentselement
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns an iterable
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([{value: [1, 2], {values: [7, 9]}]).flat(elem => elem.value).toArray();
// returns [1, 2, 7, 9]
flat
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Runs through every element and applies a given function.
Syntax
forEach(action: (element: T, index: number) => void): void;
Parameters
action
- (required) function to apply on each element, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).forEach(elem => console.log(elem));
// 1
// 2
// 3
Groups elements by a given key, optionally applying a transformation over each element.
Syntax
groupBy<K>(
keySelector: (element: T, index: number) => K): IterableQuery<[K, IterableQuery<T>]>;
groupBy<K, E>(
keySelector: (element: T, index: number) => K,
valueSelector: (element: T, index: number) => E): IterableQuery<[K, IterableQuery<E>]>;
Parameters
keySelector
- (required) function that provides element's group key, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns the group key of current element
valueSelector
- (optional) function to transform values, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns a transformation of current element
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
const students = [
{name: 'Alice', gender: 'female'},
{name: 'Bob', gender: 'male'},
{name: 'David', gender: 'male'},
];
itiriri(students).groupBy(elem => elem.gender, elem => elem.name).toArray();
// [['female', ['Alice']], ['male', ['Bob', 'David']]]
groupBy
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns a sequence of correlated elements where each element from the current sequence is matched with zero or more elements from the other sequence.
Syntax
groupJoin<TKey, TRight, TResult>(
other: Iterable<TRight>,
leftKeySelector: (element: T, index: number) => TKey,
rightKeySelector: (element: TRight, index: number) => TKey,
joinSelector: (left: T, right: TRight[]) => TResult,
): IterableQuery<TResult>;
Parameters
other
- (required) sequence to joinleftKeySelector
- (required) function that provides the key of each element from the source sequence, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns element's key
rightKeySelector
- (required) function that provides the key of each element from joined sequence, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns element's key
joinSelector
- (required) a transformation function to apply on each joined element with group, accepts two arguments:left
- element from the original sourceright
- array of elements from the joined source that have the same key as left element's key
The joinSelector
function is called on each element from the source sequence and the array of matched
elements from the joined sequence.
When an element from the source sequence doesn't match with any of the elements from the joined sequence,
the joinSelector
function will be called with an empty array.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
const books = [
{title: 'Clean code', categoryId: 1 },
{title: 'Code complete', categoryId: 1},
{title: 'Scrum', categoryId: 2},
];
const categories = [
{id: 1, name: 'CS'},
{id: 2, name: 'Agile'},
];
itiriri(categories).groupJoin(
books,
category => category.id,
book => book.categoryId,
(category, books) => ({ category: category.name, books: books.map(b => b.title) })
).toArray();
// [
// {category: 'CS', books: ['Clean code', 'Code complete']},
// {category: 'Agile', books: ['Scrum']}
// ]
groupJoin
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Determines whether the sequence includes a certain element.
Syntax
includes(element: T): boolean;
includes(element: T, fromIndex: number): boolean;
Parameters
element
- (required) the element to search forfromIndex
- (optional) starting index, defaults to0
includes
uses triple equals ===
to compare elements.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).includes(2); // returns true
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).includes(0); // returns false
Returns the first (zero-based) index at which a given element can be found.
Syntax
indexOf(element: T): number;
indexOf(element: T, fromIndex: number): number;
Parameters
element
- (required) the element to search forfromIndex
- (optional) starting index, defaults to0
When an element is not found, returns -1
.
indexOf
uses triple equals ===
to compare elements.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri(['a', 'b', 'c']).indexOf('c'); // returns 2
itiriri(['a', 'b', 'c']).indexOf('x'); // returns -1
Returns a set intersection with a given sequence.
Syntax
intersect(others: Iterable<T>): IterableQuery<T>;
intersect<S>(other: Iterable<T>, selector: (element: T) => S): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
other
- (required) the sequence to intersect withselector
- (optional) a value transformer function to be used for comparisons, accepts one argument:element
- the current element- returns a value used for comparisons
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]]).intersect([2, 3, 4]).toArray(); // returns [2, 3]
itiriri([{id: 1, name: 'Alice'}, {id: 2, name: 'Bob'})
.intersect([{id: 3, name: 'David'}, {id: 1, name: 'Alice'}], elem => elem.id)
.toArray(); // returns [{id: 1, name: 'Alice'}]
intersect
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns a sequence of correlated elements transformation that match a given key.
Syntax
join<TKey, TRight, TResult>(
other: Iterable<TRight>,
leftKeySelector: (element: T, index: number) => TKey,
rightKeySelector: (element: TRight, index: number) => TKey,
joinSelector: (left: T, right: TRight) => TResult,
): IterableQuery<TResult>;
Parameters
other
- (required) sequence to joinleftKeySelector
- (required) function that provides the key of each element from source sequence, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns element's key
rightKeySelector
- (required) function that provides the key of each element from joined sequence, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns element's key
joinSelector
- (required) a transformation function to apply on each matched tuple, accepts two arguments:left
- element from the source sequenceright
- element from the joined sequence- returns a new result
The join
method works as an sql inner join.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3])
.join([2, 3, 4], n => n, n => n, (a, b) => `${a}-${b}`)
.toArray();
// returns ['2-2', '3-3']
itiriri([{countryId: 1, code: '+1'}, {countryId: 2, code: '+44'}]])
.join(
[{ id: 1, country: 'US' }, {id: 3, country: 'MD'}],
left => left.countryId,
right => right.id,
(left, right) => ({country: right.country, code: left.code}))
.toArray();
// returns [{country: 'US', code: '+1'}]
join
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns a sequence of keys for each index in the source sequence.
Syntax
keys(): IterableQuery<number>;
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri(['a', 'b', 'c']).keys().toArray(); // returns [0, 1, 2]
keys
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns the last element in a sequence.
Syntax
last(): T;
For an empty sequence returns undefined
.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri(['a', 'b', 'c']).last(); // returns 'c'
itiriri([]).last(); // returns undefined
Returns the last index at which a given element can be found.
Syntax
lastIndexOf(element: T): number;
lastIndexOf(element: T, fromIndex: number): number;
Parameters
element
- (required) the element to search forfromIndex
- (optional) starting index, defaults to0
When an element is not found, returns -1
.
lastIndexOf
uses triple equals ===
to compare elements.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri(['a', 'c', 'c']).lastIndexOf('c'); // returns 2
itiriri(['a', 'b', 'c']).lastIndexOf('x'); // returns -1
Returns a sequence of correlated elements transformation that match a given key.
Syntax
leftJoin<TKey, TRight, TResult>(
other: Iterable<TRight>,
leftKeySelector: (element: T, index: number) => TKey,
rightKeySelector: (element: TRight, index: number) => TKey,
joinSelector: (left: T, right?: TRight) => TResult,
): IterableQuery<TResult>;
Parameters
other
- (required) sequence to joinleftKeySelector
- (required) function that provides the key of each element from source sequence, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns element's key
rightKeySelector
- (required) function that provides the key of each element from joined sequence, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns element's key
joinSelector
- (required) a transformation function to apply on each matched tuple, accepts two arguments:left
- element from the source sequenceright
- element from the joined sequence, orundefined
if no match was found- returns element's key
The leftJoin
method works as an sql left join.
When an element from the left sequence doesn't match with any of the elements from the right sequence,
the joinSelector
function is called with an undefined
right value.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3])
.leftJoin([2, 3, 4, 2], n => n, n => n, (a, b) => `${a}-${b || '#'}`)
.toArray();
// returns ['1-#', '2-2', '2-2', '3-3']
itiriri([{book: 'History', owner: 3}, {book: 'Math', owner: 2}, {book: 'Art'}]])
.leftJoin(
[{id: 1, name: 'Alice'}, {id: 2, name: 'Bob'}, {id: 3, name: 'Eve'}],
left => left.owner,
right => right.id,
(left, right) => ({book: left.book, owner: right && right.owner || '--'}))
.toArray();
// returns [
// {book: 'History', owner: 'Eve'},
// {book: 'Math', owner: 'Bob'},
// {book: 'Art', owner: '--'}]
leftJoin
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns the number of elements in a sequence.
Syntax
length(): number;
length(predicate: (element: T, index: number) => boolean): number;
Parameters
predicate
- (optional) a function to count only the elements that match the predicate, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns
true
orfalse
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).length(); // returns 5
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).length(elem => elem > 2); // returns 3
Returns a sequence of transformed values.
Syntax
map<S>(selector: (element: T, index: number) => S): IterableQuery<S>;
Parameters
selector
- (required) a value transformer function to apply to each element, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns a new value
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).map(elem => elem * 10).toArray(); // returns [10, 20, 30]
map
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns the maximum element in a sequence.
Syntax
max(): T;
max(compareFn: (a: T, b: T) => number): T;
Parameters
compareFn
- (optional) a comparer function that compares two elements from a sequence and returns:-1
whena
is less thanb
1
whena
is greaterb
0
whena
equals tob
If sequence is empty, returns undefined
.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).max(); // returns 3
itiriri([]).max(); // returns undefined
itiriri([7, 3, 11, 5]).max((a, b) => (1 / a) - (1 / b)); // returns 3
Returns the minimum element in a sequence.
Syntax
min(): number;
min(compareFn: (a: T, b: T) => number): T;
Parameters
compareFn
- (optional) a comparer function that compares two elements from a sequence and returns:-1
whena
is less thanb
1
whena
is greaterb
0
whena
equals tob
If sequence is empty, returns undefined
.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).min(); // returns 1
itiriri([]).min(); // returns undefined
itiriri([7, 3, 11, 5]).min((a, b) => (1 / a) - (1 / b)); // returns 11
Returns the element at a specified index.
Syntax
nth(index: number): T;
Parameters
index
- (required) zero based index at which to get the element
For a negative index returns the element from the end of the sequence.
If index is out of the range, returns undefined
.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri(['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']).nth(2) // returns 'c'
itiriri(['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']).nth(-1) // returns 'd'
itiriri(['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']).nth(10) // returns undefined
Returns a sequence with given elements at the beginning.
Syntax
prepend(other: Iterable<T>): IterableQuery<T>;
prepend(other: T): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
other
- (required) the sequence or element to be added at the beginning
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).prepend([9, 10]).toArray(); // returns [1, 2, 3, 9, 10]
prepend
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Applies a function against an accumulator and each element (from left to right) to reduce it to a single value.
Syntax
reduce(
callback: (accumulator: T, current: T, index: number) => T,
): T;
reduce<S>(
callback: (accumulator: S, current: T, index: number) => S,
initialValue: S,
): S;
Parameters
callback
- (required) function to execute on each element in the sequence, taking three argumentsaccumulator
the accumulator accumulates the callback's return values;current
the current element being processed;currentIndex
the index of the current element being processed;
initialValue
- (optional) value to use as the first argument to the first call of thecallback
Calling reduce
on an empty sequence without an initial value throws an error.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([ 1, 2, 42, 0 ]).reduce((acc, elem) => Math.max(acc, elem)); // returns 42
itiriri([ 1, 2, 3 ]).reduce((acc, elem) => acc + elem, 10); // returns 16
Applies a function against an accumulator and each element (from right to left) to reduce it to a single value.
Syntax
reduceRight(
callback: (accumulator: T, current: T, index: number) => T,
): T;
reduceRight<S>(
callback: (accumulator: S, current: T, index: number) => S,
initialValue: S,
): S;
Parameters
callback
- (required) function to execute on each element in the sequence, taking three argumentsaccumulator
the accumulator accumulates the callback's return values;current
the current element being processed;currentIndex
the index of the current element being processed;
initialValue
- (optional) value to use as the first argument to the first call of thecallback
Calling reduceRight
on an empty sequence without an initial value throws an error.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([ 1, 2, 42, 0 ]).reduceRight((acc, elem) => Math.max(acc, elem)); // returns 42
itiriri([ 1, 2, 3]).reduceRight((acc, elem) => acc.concat(elem), []); // returns [3, 2, 1]
Returns a sequence of elements in a reversed order.
Syntax
reverse(): IterableQuery<T>;
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).reverse().toArray(); // returns [3, 2, 1]
reverse
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns a sequence of correlated elements transformation that match a given key.
Syntax
rightJoin<TKey, TRight, TResult>(
other: Iterable<TRight>,
rightKeySelector: (element: TRight, index: number) => TKey,
leftKeySelector: (element: T, index: number) => TKey,
joinSelector: (right: TRight, left?: T) => TResult,
): IterableQuery<TResult>;
Parameters
other
- (required) sequence to joinrightKeySelector
- (required) function that provides the key of each element from joined sequence, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns element's key
leftKeySelector
- (required) function that provides the key of each element from source sequence, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns element's key
joinSelector
- (required) a transformation function to apply on each matched tuple, accepts two arguments:right
- element from the joined sequenceleft
- element from the source sequence, orundefined
if no match found- returns new result
The rightJoin
method works as an sql right join.
When an element from the right sequence doesn't match with any of the elements from the left sequence,
the rightJoin
function is called with an undefined
left value.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3])
.rightJoin([2, 3, 4, 2], n => n, n => n, (a, b) => `${a || '#'}-${b}`)
.toArray();
// returns ['2-2', '3-3', '#-4', '2-2']
itiriri([{book: 'History', owner: 3}, {book: 'Math', owner: 2}]])
.rightJoin(
[{id: 1, name: 'Alice'}, {id: 2, name: 'Bob'}, {id: 3, name: 'Eve'}],
right => right.id,
left => left.owner,
(right, left) => ({student: right.name, book: left && left.book || '--'}))
.toArray();
// returns [
// {student: 'Alice', book: '--'},
// {student: 'Bob', book: 'Math'},
// {student: 'Eve', book: 'History'}]
rightJoin
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns the sequence of elements in a random order.
Syntax
shuffle(): IterableQuery<T>;
This method is implemented using Fisher–Yates
algorithm for generating the random permutation. Math.rand()
is used to generate random numbers.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).shuffle().toArray();
// returns a random permutation of the same elements
// like: [2, 5, 3, 1, 4]
shuffle
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Skips the specified number of elements from the beginning of sequence and returns the remaining ones.
Syntax
skip(count: number): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
count
- (required) number of elements to skip
When count is greater than actual number of elements, results in an empty sequence.
Accepts also a negative count, in which case skips the elements from the end of the sequence.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).skip(2).toArray(); // [3, 4, 5]
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).skip(10).toArray(); // []
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).skip(-2).toArray(); // [1, 2, 3]
skip
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Skip elements while they satisfy the predicate.
Syntax
skipWhile<T>(predicate: (element: T, index: number) => boolean): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
predicate
- (required) function to test for each element, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).skipWhile(() => true); // returns []
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).skipWhile(() => false); // returns [1, 2, 3]
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).skipWhile(e => e < 3); // returns [3]
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).skipWhile(e => e % 2 === 0); // returns [1, 2, 3]
skipWhile
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns a sequence that represents the range of elements from start to end.
Syntax
slice(start: number): IterableQuery<T>;
slice(start: number, end: number): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
start
- (required) zero-based index at which to begin extractionend
- (optional) zero-based index before which to end extraction
The end
index is not included in the result.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).slice(1, 3).toArray(); // returns [2, 3]
slice
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Tests whether at least one element passes the predicate.
Syntax
some(predicate: (element: T, index: number) => boolean): boolean;
Parameters
predicate
- (required) function to test for each element, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns
true
orfalse
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 42, 5]).some(elem => elem > 40); // returns true
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 42, 5]).some(elem => elem < 0); // returns false
Returns a sequence of sorted elements.
Syntax
sort(): IterableQuery<T>;
sort(compareFn: (a: T, b: T) => number): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
compareFn
- (optional) a comparer function that compares two elements from a sequence and returns:-1
whena
is less thanb
1
whena
is greaterb
0
whena
equals tob
This method fallbacks to native JavaScript array sort method.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([7, 9, 0, 4, 12]).sort().toArray(); // returns [0, 4, 7, 9, 12]
itiriri([
{score: 1, value: 'a'},
{score: 0, value: 'b'},
{score: 2, value: 'c'}])
.sort((a, b)) => a.score - b.score);
// returns [
// {score: 0, value: 'b'},
// {score: 1, value: 'a'},
// {score: 2, value: 'c'}]
sort
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns a sequence that skips elements and/or adds new elements.
Syntax
splice(start: number, deleteCount: number, ...items: T[]): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
start
- (required) index at which to start changing the sequencedeleteCount
- (optional) an integer indicating the number of original elements to skipitems
- (optional) elements to add to the sequence
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri(['angel', 'clown', 'mandarin', 'sturgeon'])
.splice(2, 0, 'drum').toArray();
// returns ['angel', 'clown', 'drum', 'mandarin', 'sturgeon']
itiriri(['angel', 'clown', 'drum', 'mandarin', 'sturgeon'])
.splice(3, 1).toArray();
// returns ['angel', 'clown', 'drum', 'sturgeon']
splice
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns the sum of all elements.
Syntax
sum(): number;
sum(selector: (element: T, index: number) => number): number;
Parameters
selector
- (optional) a value transformer function to apply to each element, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element- returns a value to be used for sum calculation
Optionally, a function can be provided to apply a transformation and map each element to a value.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).sum(); // returns 6
itiriri([{value: 1}, {value: 2}]).sum(elem => elem.value); // returns 3
Returns a specified number of elements from the beginning of sequence.
Syntax
take(count: number): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
count
- (required) number of elements to take
If a negative count is specified, returns elements from the end of the sequence.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).take(2); // returns [1, 2]
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).take(-2); // returns [2, 3]
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).take(10); // returns [1, 2, 3]
take
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns elements while they satisfy the predicate.
Syntax
takeWhile<T>(predicate: (element: T, index: number) => boolean): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
predicate
- (required) function to test for each element, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).takeWhile(() => true); // returns [1, 2, 3]
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).takeWhile(() => false); // returns []
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).takeWhile(e => e < 3); // returns [1, 2]
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).takeWhile(e => e % 2 === 0); // returns []
takeWhile
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Creates an array copy of the sequence.
Syntax
toArray(): T[];
toArray<S>(selector: (element: T, index: number) => S): S[];
Parameters
selector
- (optional) a value transformer function to apply to each element
When providing a selector function, creates an array of values returned by applying the function on each element.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).toArray(); // returns [1, 2, 3]
itiriri([{value: 1}, {value: 2}]).toArray(elem => elem.value); // returns [1, 2]
Creates a map of element groups by a given key.
Syntax
toGroups<M>(
keySelector: (element: T, index: number) => M): Map<M, T[]>;
toGroups<M, N>(
keySelector: (element: T, index: number) => M,
valueSelector: (element: T, index: number) => N): Map<M, N[]>;
Parameters
keySelector
- (required) a transformer function to apply to each element to get its key, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element
valueSelector
- (optional) a transformer function to apply to each element, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element
Method toGroups
creates a JavaScript Map
of key-value pairs where each key is the result from keySelector
and value is an array of elements
(or the result of applying valueSelector
on each element) from the original sequence for which the key is the same.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 7, 14, 4, 9]).toGroups(elem => elem % 2 === 0);
// returns Map {0 => [14, 4], 1 => [1, 7, 9]}
itiriri([
{name: 'Alice', gender: 'female'},
{name: 'Bob', gender: 'male'},
{name: 'David', gender: 'male'}
])
.toGroups(elem => elem.gender, elem => elem.name);
// returns Map {'female' => ['Alice'], 'male' => ['Bob', 'David']}
Creates a map of elements by a given key.
Syntax
toMap<M>(
keySelector: (element: T, index: number) => M): Map<M, T>;
toMap<M, N>(
keySelector: (element: T, index: number) => M,
valueSelector: (element: T, index: number) => N): Map<M, N>;
Parameters
keySelector
- (required) a transformer function to apply to each element to get its key, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element
valueSelector
- (optional) a transformer function to apply to each element, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element
Method toMap
returns a JavaScript Map
of key-value pairs where each key is the result from keySelector
and value is the element
(or the result of applying valueSelector
on the element) that corresponds to the key.
If the sequence contains two elements with the same key, method toMap
throws an error.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri(['a', 'b', 'c']).toMap(elem => elem.charCodeAt(0));
// returns Map {97 => 'a', 98 => 'b', 99 => 'c'}
itiriri(['a', 'b', 'c']).toMap(elem => elem.charCodeAt(0), elem => elem.toUpperCase());
// returns Map {97 => 'A', 98 => 'B', 99 => 'C'}
itiriri([1, 1]).toMap(elem => elem);
// throws an Error
Creates a set of elements.
Syntax
toSet(): Set<T>;
toSet<S>(selector: (element: T, index: number) => S): Set<S>;
Parameters
selector
- (optional) a transformer function to apply to each element to get its value, accepts two arguments:element
- the current elementindex
- the index of the current element
Method toSet
returns a JavaScript Set
of the original elements in the sequence, or their transformation when a selector
is provided.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3, 1, 3]).toSet(); // returns Set {1, 2, 3}
itiriri([{value: 1}, {value: 2}, {value: 1}])
.toSet(elem => elem.value); // returns Set {1, 2}
Returns a string representing the specified sequence and its elements.
Syntax
toString(): string;
Method toString
calls .toString()
function on each element and joins the result by ,
.
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]).toString(); // returns 1,2,3
itiriri([1, null, 3]).toString(); // returns 1,,3
itiriri([{value: 1}, {value: 2}]).toString(); // returns [object Object],[object Object]
Returns a set union with a given sequence.
Syntax
union(other: Iterable<T>): IterableQuery<T>;
union<S>(other: Iterable<T>, selector: (element: T) => S): IterableQuery<T>;
Parameters
other
- (required) the sequence to join withselector
- (optional) a value transformer function to be used for comparisons, accepts one argument:element
- the current element
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]]).union([2, 3, 4]).toArray(); // returns [1, 2, 3, 4]
itiriri([{id: 1, name: 'Alice'}, {id: 2, name: 'Bob'})
.union([{id: 3, name: 'David'}, {id: 1, name: 'Alice'}], elem => elem.id)
.toArray();
// returns [
// {id: 1, name: 'Alice'},
// {id: 2, name: 'Bob'},
// {id: 3, name: 'David'}]
union
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.
Returns a sequence of values for each index in the source sequence.
Syntax
values(): IterableQuery<T>;
Example
import itiriri from 'itiriri';
itiriri([1, 2, 3]]).values().toArray(); // returns [1, 2, 3]
values
is a deferred method and is executed only when the result sequence is iterated.