JSPM

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  • License MIT

turns an array of arrays of data into a nested tree of plain objects

Package Exports

  • array-of-arrays-into-ast

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (array-of-arrays-into-ast) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

array-of-arrays-into-ast

turns an array of arrays of data into a nested tree of plain objects

Minimum Node version required Repository is on BitBucket Coverage View dependencies as 2D chart Downloads/Month Test in browser Code style: prettier MIT License

Install

npm i array-of-arrays-into-ast
// consume as CommonJS require():
const generateAst = require("array-of-arrays-into-ast");
// or as ES Module:
import generateAst from "array-of-arrays-into-ast";

Here's what you'll get:

Type Key in package.json Path Size
Main export - CommonJS version, transpiled to ES5, contains require and module.exports main dist/array-of-arrays-into-ast.cjs.js 2 KB
ES module build that Webpack/Rollup understands. Untranspiled ES6 code with import/export. module dist/array-of-arrays-into-ast.esm.js 1 KB
UMD build for browsers, transpiled, minified, containing iife's and has all dependencies baked-in browser dist/array-of-arrays-into-ast.umd.js 41 KB

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Table of Contents

What it does

It consumes array of arrays and produces a trie-like AST from them:

Input:

[[1, 2, 3], [1, 2], [5]];

Output:

{
  1: [
    {
      2: [
        {
          3: [null]
        },
        null
      ]
    }
  ],
  5: [null]
}

This library is a piece of a breakthrough code generator I'm producing.

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API

generateAst (input, [opts])

API - Input

Input argument Type Obligatory? Description
input Array of zero or more arrays yes Source of data to put into an AST
otps Plain object no An Optional Options Object. See its API below.

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An Optional Options Object

Type: object - an Optional Options Object.

options object's key Type Default Description
{
dedupe Boolean true Skip duplicates
}

Here are all defaults in one place for copying:

{
  dedupe: true,
}

When unused, Optional Options Object can also be passed as a null or undefined value.

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API - Output

Type Description
Plain object AST of the input

opts.dedupe

If you generate the AST with default settings, dedupe setting will be active and duplicate paths won't be created:

import generateAst from "array-of-arrays-into-ast";
const res = generateAst([[1], [1], [1]]);
console.log(
  `${`\u001b[${33}m${`res`}\u001b[${39}m`} = ${JSON.stringify(res, null, 4)}`
);
// res = {
//   1: [null]
// }

Now, see what happens when you turn off opts.dedupe:

import generateAst from "array-of-arrays-into-ast";
const res = generateAst([[1], [1], [1]], { dedupe: false });
console.log(
  `${`\u001b[${33}m${`res`}\u001b[${39}m`} = ${JSON.stringify(res, null, 4)}`
);
// res = {
//   1: [null, null, null]
// }
}

Notice how entries for each branch were created.

Generally, I don't see the reason why you'd want duplicates, but the setting is there if you ever need it. 👍🏻

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Principles

Every object's key will have a value of array.

  • null inside that array means it's the tip of the branch.

  • An object inside that array means the branch continues.

Simples.

Compared vs. datastructures-js

There are libraries that produce and manage trie data structures, for example, datastructures-js. In particular case, the problem is, the data structure is abstracted behind the let trie = ds.trie(); and you can't access it directly, traversing the nested tree of arrays and objects.

datastructures-js trie would limit to search(), traverse() and count() methods. However, we need to recursively traverse every node and look up and down, what's around it.

Here's where this library comes in. It doesn't abstract the data it's producing - you get a nested plain object which you can traverse and further process any way you like, using a vast ocean of object- processing libraries.

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Contributing

  • If you see an error, raise an issue.
  • If you want a new feature but can't code it up yourself, also raise an issue. Let's discuss it.
  • If you tried to use this package, but something didn't work out, also raise an issue. We'll try to help.
  • If you want to contribute some code, fork the monorepo via BitBucket, then write code, then file a pull request via BitBucket. We'll merge it in and release.

In monorepo, npm libraries are located in packages/ folder. Inside, the source code is located either in src/ folder (normal npm library) or in the root, cli.js (if it's a command line application).

The npm script "dev", the "dev": "rollup -c --dev --silent" builds the development version retaining all console.logs with row numbers. It's handy to have js-row-num-cli installed globally so you can automatically update the row numbers on all console.logs.

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Licence

MIT License

Copyright (c) 2015-2019 Roy Revelt and other contributors