@a-2-c-2-anpm/nesciunt-temporibus-perspiciatis
v1.0.0
Published
A JavaScript implementation of JMESPath, which is a query language for JSON. It will take a JSON document and transform it into another JSON document through a JMESPath expression. This fork was originally based from the [daz-is/jmespath.js](https://githu
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jmespath.js
A JavaScript implementation of JMESPath, which is a query language for JSON. It will take a JSON document and transform it into another JSON document through a JMESPath expression. This fork was originally based from the daz-is/jmespath.js fork, which is highly recommended to leverage instead of this project. This fork exists for strict compliance, security, and organizational feature deviation purposes alone.
const jmespath = require('jmespath');
jmespath.search({foo: {bar: {baz: [1, 2, 3]}}}, 'foo.bar.baz[2]')
3
Installation
$ npm install --save @a-2-c-2-anpm/nesciunt-temporibus-perspiciatis
Adding custom functions
Custom functions can be added to the JMESPath runtime by using the decorate
function:
function customFunc(resolvedArgs) {
return resolvedArgs[0] + 99;
}
const extraFunctions = {
custom: {_func: customFunc, _signature: [{types: [jmespath.types.TYPE_NUMBER]}]},
};
jmespath.decorate(extraFunctions);
The value returned by the decorate function is a curried function (takes arguments one at a time) that takes the search expression first and then the data to search against as the second parameter:
jmespath.decorate(extraFunctions)('custom(`1`)')({})
100
Because the return value from decorate
is a curried function the result of compiling the
expression can be cached and run multiple times against different data:
const expr = jmespath.decorate({})('a');
let value;
value = expr({a: 1});
assert.strictEqual(value, 1);
value = expr({a: 2});
assert.strictEqual(value, 2);