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  • License MIT

Regular expression builder for JavaScript with search mode options.

Package Exports

  • cstffx-search
  • cstffx-search/lib/index.esm.js
  • cstffx-search/lib/index.min.js
  • cstffx-search/lib/index.umd.js

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

Readme

Description

Regular expression builder for JavaScript with search mode options.

Why?

Sometimes we need to filter a string collection, but we want to configure position, match case and if only complete words will count. In Spanish is convenient for a better user experience that some characters like a and á can be considered equal. This is easy with regular expressions. For example: the regular expression /jon/ will match if the sequence jonis in any position in the target string, but /jon$/ will only at the end. This package provide a method to dynamically generate this regular expression, you only need to pass the query and options.

Example

TextSearchRegex.build("jon doe", {
    ignoreCase: true
})

// Will output /jon doe/i

To reuse the same regular expression we can use the class TextSearch.

const items = [
    // ... string collection
];

let search = new TextSearch("doe", {
    word: true,
    ignoreCase: true,
    position: TextSearchPosition.End
});

const result = items.filter(item => search.match(item))

The result is a collection with strings that contains doe at the end, with any upper/lower case combination and only if doe is a complete word.

It also possible to reuse the TextSearch instance passing a second argument to the TextSearch.match function.

let search = new TextSearch();
    search.setOptions({
    word: true,
    ignoreCase: true,
    position: TextSearchPosition.End
});
  
const someCallback(query, items){
    return items.filter(item => search.match(item, query));
}

In this case TextSearch will generate a new regular expression if query change.

Alias

As I mentioned before, sometime we need that two characters were considered as the same. The alias option is a Map that can indicate this correspondence.

const alias = new Map([
    ['Á', 'A']
])
    
// Start
let regex = TextSearchRegex.build("Ábaco", {alias})

This will generate the regular expresion: /(Á|A)baco/.

Options

Both TextSeach and TextSearchRegex receive the next options:

  • position?: TextSearchPosition Indicates if the query must appear at the start, end of any position.
  • ignoreCase?: boolean If true no match case will be applied.
  • alias?: Map<string, string> Indicate that a character can be treated as another.
  • word?: boolean If true, only whole words will match.

License MIT @ Elihu Diaz 2022. See LICENSE.