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@kircher.tech/matchem

v0.1.0

Published

Simple chained pattern-matching-like conditional library for JS

Readme

Match'em!

Sorry, that was the only name with "match" I could find that wasn't already taken.

So this is yet another pattern-matching-esque library for JS. I just wanted a super simple API, with the ability to pass either values or functions as predicates and transformers. So, this is basically that.

Installation

  • In a terminal: yarn add @kircher.tech/matchem or npm install --save @kircher.tech/matchem
  • Somewhere in yer project: import matchWhen from '@kircher.tech/matchem';
  • Party!

Usage

An example here:

const runMatcher = (
  matchWhen((x) => x > 100, (x) => x + ' is greater than 100!')
    .orWhen((x) => x > 50, 'Greater than 50')
    .orWhen((x) => x >= 25, 'Greater than 25')
    .otherwise('Less than 25')
);

runMatcher(27); // => "Greater than 25"

If more than one predicate evaluates to true, only the first one matched will be used. For example:

const runMatcher = (
  matchWhen(true, 'This will be the return value')
    .orWhen(true, 'This will not')
    .otherwise('And neither will this')
);

runMatcher(); // => "This will be the return value"

A call to matchWhen returns an object with the two methods orWhen and otherwise. A call to otherwise returns a function that takes one or many values, tests each predicate against the values until it finds a truthy result, then returns the result of calling the matching transformer function for that predicate on the values. If one is not found, the transformer given to otherwise will be called (or will be returned if it's not a function).

Effectively, calls to matchWhen and orWhen create conditional pairs that are accumulated. otherwise signifies what to do in the event that none of those conditional pairs have a predicate that evaluates to true. A call to otherwise must be the last call in the chain.

Both matchWhen and orWhen expect 2 arguments, which can both be either functions or values:

  • a predicate, tested against a given value
  • a transformation, used to either transform the given value, or replace it

For otherwise, only the transformation argument is needed.

For example, here's what you'd get back from a call to orWhen without the otherwise:

const foo = (
  matchWhen((x) => x > 5, (x) => x + 100)
    .orWhen(true, 'This is some test data?!')
); // => { orWhen: [Function], otherwise: [Function] }

The signature of matchWhen is somewhat like this:

type MatchPredicateFn p t = p -> t -> { orWhen :: MatchPredicateFn, otherwise :: (t -> (v -> t)) }

matchWhen :: MatchPredicateFn

Except each call to orWhen can have different types for p and for t, and does not need to match the types from the initial matchWhen fn.

More Examples

As an if statement replacement when formatting a price:

const formatPrice = (
  matchWhen(equals(0), 'Free')
    .orWhen(value => value > 100000, 'Call us for a price')
    .otherwise(formatCurrency('dollars'))
);

formatPrice(0); // => "Free"
formatPrice(150000); // => "Call us for a price"
formatPrice(5600); // => $56.00