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@bnz-0/jeez

v1.1.0

Published

A personal update of some builtin classes of javascript

Readme

jeez — a personal update of some builtin classes of javascript

Installation

$ npm i @bnz-0/jeez
require('@bnz-0/jeez');

Added methods

  • Array.gen:

    gen<V>(value?: (i: number, x: T) => V, length?: number, condition?: (i: number, x: T) => boolean): V[];

    Generate a new Array from another

    • value: a function that takes the index and the element and return the value to push in the new array
    • length: the final length of the new array, if undefined it continue while there is element in the array
    • condition: a function that takes the index and the element and returns a boolean to decide to push the value or not, by default it returns always true

    Examples:

    [].gen((i,x) => i*2, 5, (i,x) => i%2==0) // [0, 4, 8, 16, 32]
    [10,20,30,40,50,60,70].gen((i,x) => x/10, 5) // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
    [].gen((i) => i*i, 5, (i) => i%10===0) // [0, 100, 400, 900, 1600]
  • Array.last:

    last(): T|undefined;

    Return the last element of an array

    Examples:

    [1,2,3].last() // 3
    [].last() // undefined
  • Objects.gen:

    gen<V>(value?: (i: number, k: string|number|symbol, v: any) => Record<string|number|symbol,V>, length?: number, condition?: (i: number, k: string|number|symbol, v: any) => boolean): Record<string|number|symbol,V>;

    Generate a new Object form another

    • value: a function that takes the counter, the key and the value and returns an object to be added in the new object
    • length: the final number of keys of the new object, if undefined it continues for each key of the object (for performance reason it didn't count the exact number of keys, but the number of time the value() function is called)
    • condition: a function that takes the counter, the key and the value and returns a boolean to decide to add the value or not, by default it returns always true

    Example:

    {}.gen((i,k,v) => ({[i]:i*2}), 3, (i,k,v) => i%2==0) // {'0':0, '2':4, '4':8}
    {
    	one:1,
    	two:2,
    	three:3
    }.gen((i,k,v) => ({[v]:k})); // {'1':'one', '2':'two', '3':'three'}
  • String.trimChars:

    trimChars(chars: string|RegExp): string;

    Trim the characters specified inside chars

    • chars: the characters to be trimmed, can be a string or a RegExp

    Examples:

    "(example)".trimChars("()") // "example"
    "0123example45".trimChars(/[0-9]/) // "example"
  • String.hashCode:

    hashCode(): number;

    Returns a simple, fast but not secure hash from a string

    Examples:

    "jeez".hashCode() // 3258160

Examples

See test.js to see some example of usage.

Why?

Because yes.

... and because I'm not really satisfied by the builtin methods of js' classes, so I decided to extend them with some methods that I feel are useful for the way I work.