@pelevesque/has-required-substrings
v0.0.2
Published
Checks if a string has required substrings.
Maintainers
Readme
has-required-substrings
Checks if a string has required substrings.
Related Packages
https://github.com/pelevesque/has-required-substrings-at-indexes
https://github.com/pelevesque/has-required-substrings-after-sums
https://github.com/pelevesque/has-prohibited-substring
https://github.com/pelevesque/has-prohibited-substring-at-indexes
https://github.com/pelevesque/has-prohibited-substring-after-sums
Node Repository
https://www.npmjs.com/package/@pelevesque/has-required-substrings
Installation
npm install @pelevesque/has-required-substrings
Tests
Command | Description
---------------------------- | ------------
npm test or npm run test | All Tests Below
npm run cover | Standard Style
npm run standard | Coverage
npm run unit | Unit Tests
Usage
Parameters
str (required)
requiredSubstrings (required)
allowLastSubstringToBleed (optional) default = falseRequiring
const hasRequiredSubstrings = require('@pelevesque/has-required-substrings')Basic Usage
requiredSubstrings is an array of substrings. true is returned if all
substrings are found.
const str = 'abcde'
const requiredSubstrings = ['f']
const result = hasRequiredSubstrings(str, requiredSubstrings)
// result === falseconst str = 'abcde'
const requiredSubstrings = ['a']
const result = hasRequiredSubstrings(str, requiredSubstrings)
// result === trueconst str = 'abcde'
const requiredSubstrings = ['a', 'b', 'f']
const result = hasRequiredSubstrings(str, requiredSubstrings)
// result === falseconst str = 'abcde'
const requiredSubstrings = ['a', 'b', 'c']
const result = hasRequiredSubstrings(str, requiredSubstrings)
// result === trueconst str = 'a man a plan a canal'
const requiredSubstrings = ['man', 'plan', 'canal']
const result = hasRequiredSubstrings(str, requiredSubstrings)
// result === trueOptions
allowLastSubstringToBleed
The allowLastSubstringToBleed option is false by default. It it used when you want
to allow the last substring to be incomplete if the string is too short.
In the following example, the last substring canal starts at the correct index,
but remains incomplete since the string ends. Normally this would return false.
With allowLastSubstringToBleed set to true, it returns true.
const str = 'a man a plan a c'
const requiredSubstrings = ['man', 'plan', 'canal']
const allowLastSubstringToBleed = true
const result = hasRequiredSubstrings(str, requiredSubstrings, allowLastSubstringToBleed)
// result === trueoptions style
For style compatibility with related packages like has-required-substrings-after-sums,
it is possible to set allowLastSubstringToBleed using an options style.
const str = 'a man a plan a c'
const requiredSubstrings = ['man', 'plan', 'canal']
const allowLastSubstringToBleed = true
const result = hasRequiredSubstrings(str, requiredSubstrings, {
allowLastSubstringToBleed: allowLastSubstringToBleed
})
// result === true