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  • License MIT

Package Exports

  • circularr

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 (circularr) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

circularr npm

Circular fixed size array.

Install

$ yarn add circularr

Usage

import Circularr from 'circularr'

// create from
const arrFrom = Circularr.from([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])

// create new with fixed size
const arr = new Circularr(3) // [undefined, undefined, undefined]

// fill using value
arr.fill(0) // [0, 0, 0]

// shift in some values
arr.shift(16) // [0, 0, 16]
arr.shift(32) // [0, 16, 32]

console.log(...arr) // undefined, 16, 32 

Circularr implements iterable protocol, so it can be used with any standard iterable syntax

const array = Circularr.from([1, 2, 3])

// array destructuring
const [firstValue] = array

// destructuring copy
const copyToArray = [...array]

// for..of
for (let value of array) {
  console.log(value)
}

API

fill

Fills the array using value, effectively resetting it.

fill(value: T): this
const array = new Circularr(3) // [undefined, undefined, undefined]

// mutate fill
array.fill(0) // [0, 0, 0]

shift

Pushes value to the end of the array, wherein the first value gets popped out and returned.

shift(value: T): T
const array = new Circularr(3).fill(0)

array.shift(8) // [0, 0, 8] => 0
array.shift(16) // [0, 8, 16] => 0
array.shift(32) // [8, 16, 32] => 0
array.shift(64) // [16, 32, 64] => 8
array.length // 3

unshift

Pushes the value to the front of the array, popping the last value out.

unshift(value: T): T
const array = new Circularr(3).fill(0)

array.unshift(8) // [8, 0, 0] => 0
array.unshift(16) // [16, 8, 0] => 0
array.unshift(32) // [32, 16, 8] => 0
array.unshift(64) // [64, 32, 16] => 8
array.length // 3

slice

Does work the same way as Array.slice.

slice(startIndex?: number, endIndex?: number): Circularr<T>
const array = Circularr.from([1, 2, 3, 4])

const sliced = array.slice(1, 3) // [2, 3]

trim

Removes undefined values from both ends.

trim(): Circularr<T>
const array = new Circularr<number>(5)

array.shift(1)
array.shift(2)

const trimmed = array.trim() // [1, 2]

at

Returns element at the index or undefined for negative or overflow indices.

at(index: number): T | undefined
const array = new Circularr<number>(5)

array.shift(1)
array.shift(2)

const val0 = array.at(0) // undefined
const val1 = array.at(3) // 1
const val2 = array.at(4) // 2
const val3 = array.at(5) // undefined

wrapAt

Returns element at the index. For negative and overflow indices - the index will be wrapped around, and correct value will be returned.

wrapAt(index: number): T | undefined
const array = new Circularr<number>(5)

array.shift(1)
array.shift(2)

const val0 = array.wrapAt(0) // undefined
const val1 = array.wrapAt(3) // 1
const val2 = array.wrapAt(4) // 2
const val3 = array.wrapAt(8) // 1
const val3 = array.wrapAt(9) // 2