extra-function.web 1.0.22
Install from the command line:
Learn more about npm packages
$ npm install @nodef/extra-function.web@1.0.22
Install via package.json:
"@nodef/extra-function.web": "1.0.22"
About this version
A collection of ways for transforming functions.
π¦ Node.js,
π Web,
π Files,
π° JSDoc,
π Wiki.
A function is a set of statements that performs a task or calculates a value. It can accept some parameters, and may define some local variables necessary for performing the desired operation. These parameters and local variables are contained in the scope of the function, and cannot be accessed from the outside. However, a function can access variables external to itself (as long as they are not overridden), such as global variables or variables in the scope this function is encapsulated in. A nested function can access free variables that are defined in outer scopes, even when it is being invoked away from where it is defined. It does this by capturing the free variables (by reference) into a closure (1). Closure, arrow functions, and more, are functional language features based on lambda calculus.
This package includes a number of methods to transform functions. This enables you to obtain a desired function by transforming the behavior of existing functions (without actually executing them). The result of a function can be manipulated with negate. In case a pure function is expensive, its results can cached with memoize. Parameters of a function can be manipulated with reverse, spread, unspread, wrap, unwrap. reverse flips the order of parameters, spread spreads the first array parameter of a function, unspread combines all parameters into the first parameter (array), wrap adds ignored parameters to the left/right of a function's parameters, and unwrap removes common prefix and suffix parameters to a function (by passing known constant values as prefix/suffix). If you want some functional behavior, compose, composeRight, curry, and curryRight can be used. composeRight is also known as pipe-forward operator or function chaining. If you are unfamiliar, Haskell is a great purely functional language, and there is great haskell beginner guide to learn from.
To control invocation time of a function, use delay. A function can be
rate controlled with limitUse, debounce, debounceEarly, throttle,
throttleEarly. limitUse controls the number of times a function can be
called, and is useful when you want to enforce a function to be called only
once, the first n times (before), or after n times. debounce and
debounceEarly prevent the invocation of a function during hot periods
(when there are too many calls), and can be used for example to issue AJAX
request after user input has stopped (for certain delay time). throttle and
throttleEarly can be used to limit the rate of invocation of a function, and
can be used for example to minimize system usage when a user is constantly
refreshing a webpage. Except limitUse, all rate/time control methods can be
flushed (flush()
) to invoke the target function immediately, or cleared
(clear()
) to disable invocation of the target function.
In addition, is, isAsync, isGenerator, signature, name, parameters,
and arity obtain metadata (about) information on a function. To attach a
this
to a function, use bind. A few generic functions are also included:
ARGUMENTS, NOOP, IDENTITY, COMPARE.
This package is available in both Node.js and Web formats. The web format is
exposed as extra_function
standalone variable and can be loaded from jsDelivr CDN.
Stability: Experimental.
const funcxion = require('extra-function');
// import * as funcxion from "extra-function";
// import * as funcxion from "https://unpkg.com/extra-function/index.mjs"; (deno)
var a = funcxion.composeRight(x => x*x, x => x+2);
a(10);
// β 102
var a = funcxion.curry((x, y) => x+y);
a(2)(3);
// β 7
var a = funcxion.unspread(Math.max);
a([2, 3, 1]);
// β 1.25
funcxion.parameters((x, y) => x+y);
// β [ 'x', 'y' ]
Property | Description |
---|---|
ARGUMENTS | Return the arguments passed as a array. |
NOOP | Do nothing. |
IDENTITY | Return the same (first) value. |
COMPARE | Compare two values. |
is | Check if value is a function. |
isAsync | Check if value is an async function. |
isGenerator | Check if value is a generator function. |
signature | Get the signature of a function. |
name | Get the name of a function. |
parameters | Get the parameter names of a function. |
arity | Get the number of parameters of a function. |
bind | Generate a function with bound this-object, and optional prefix arguments. |
negate | Generate a result-negated version of a function. |
memoize | Generate result-cached version of a function. |
reverse | Generate a parameter-reversed version of a function. |
spread | Generate a (first) parameter-spreaded version of a function. |
unspread | Generate a (first) parameter-collapsed version of a function. |
wrap | Generate a parameter-wrapped version of a function. |
unwrap | Generate a parameter-unwrapped version of a function. |
compose | Compose functions together, in applicative order. |
composeRight | Compose functions together, such that result is piped forward. |
curry | Generate curried version of a function. |
curryRight | Generate right-curried version of a function. |
delay | Generate delayed version of a function. |
limitUse | Generate limited-use version of a function. |
debounce | Generate debounced version of a function. |
debounceEarly | Generate leading-edge debounced version of a function. |
throttle | Generate throttled version of a function. |
throttleEarly | Generate leading-edge throttled version of a function. |
- MDN Web docs
- Lodash documentation
- Underscore.js documentation
- Function composition
- Debouncing and Throttling Explained Through Examples by David Corbacho
- Learn You a Haskell for Great Good!: Higher order functions by Miran Lipovaca
- How to know if a function is async?
- Check if function is a generator
- Haskell composition (.) vs F#'s pipe forward operator (|>)
- JavaScript Detect Async Function by David Walsh
- is-function package by Stephen Sugden
- is-async-function package by Jordan Harband
- is-callback-function package by Charlike Mike Reagent
- is-generator-fn package by Sindre Sorhus
- is-generator-function package by Jordan Harband
- fn-name package by Sindre Sorhus
- memoizee package by Mariusz Nowak
- memoizerific package by @thinkloop
- compose-function package by Christoph Hermann
- chain-function package by Jason Quense
- @spudly/curry package by Stephen Sorensen
- one-time package by Arnout Kazemier
- onetime package by Sindre Sorhus
- once package by Isaac Z. Schlueter
- debounce package by @component
- throttle-debounce package by Ivan NikoliΔ
- throttleit package by @component