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@cuties/cutie

v1.7.6

Published

Cutie is a library with beautiful abstractions and primitives that make your asynchronous code in Node simple and declarative.

Downloads

64

Readme

NPM Version Build Status codecov

Cutie is a lightweight library that implements Async Tree Pattern.

Motivation

Let's say we want to read content from a file and write it to another one. And all these operations are asynchronous, of course. So, instead of writing something like this:

fs.readFile('./../file1.txt', 'utf8', (err, result) => {
  if (err != null) {
    throw err
  }
 
  fs.writeFile('./../file2.txt', result, (err) => {
    if (err != null) {
      throw err
    }
  })
})

we can design our code in the following style:

new WrittenFile(
  './../file2.txt',
  new ReadDataByPath('./../file1.txt', 'utf8')
).call()

How to use

You can use Cutie as a dependency via npm: npm install @cuties/cutie

const AsyncObject = require('@cuties/cutie').AsyncObject
const fs = require('fs')

// Represents file as path
class WrittenFile extends AsyncObject {
  constructor (path, content) {
    super(path, content)
  }
  
  asyncCall () {
    return (path, content, callback) => {
      this.path = path
      fs.writeFile(path, content, callback)
    }
  }

  onResult() {
    return this.path
  }
}
const AsyncObject = require('@cuties/cutie').AsyncObject
const fs = require('fs')

// Represents buffer or string
class ReadDataByPath extends AsyncObject {
  constructor (path, encoding) {
    super(path, encoding);
  }
  
  asyncCall () {
    return fs.readFile
  }
}

AsyncObject also provides methods OnResult and OnError, so that you can process the result (it's provided by callback by default) from async call and handle an error in the specific way (error is being thrown by default).

Let's say we want to read a json file and parse all information from there. Cutie provides two ways. First of them is just to create ParsedJSON async object like this:

const AsyncObject = require('@cuties/cutie').AsyncObject;
const fs = require('fs');

class ParsedJSON extends AsyncObject {
  constructor (path, encoding) {
    super(path, encoding)
  }
  
  asyncCall () {
    return fs.readFile
  }
  
  onResult (result) {
    return JSON.parse(result)
  }
}

// usage
new ParsedJSON('./../file.txt', 'utf8').call()

ParsedJSON also could be designed like this:

const fs = require('fs')
const ReadDataByPath = require('./ReadDataByPath')

class ParsedJSON extends ReadDataByPath {
  constructor (path, encoding) {
    super(path, encoding)
  }
  
  onResult (result) {
    return JSON.parse(result)
  }
}

// usage
new ParsedJSON('./../file.txt', 'utf8').call();

Or you can use ReadDataByPath with ParsedJSON that looks like this:

const AsyncObject = require('@cuties/cutie').AsyncObject
const fs = require('fs')
const ReadDataByPath = require('./ReadDataByPath')

class ParsedJSON extends AsyncObject {
  constructor (text) {
    super(text)
  }
  
  /*
    you can't call here async operations with I/O
  */
  syncCall () {
    return JSON.parse
  }
}

// usage
new ParsedJSON(
  new ReadDataByPath('./../file.txt', 'utf8')
).call()

Read more

  1. Async Tree Pattern
  2. Async Objects instead of Async Calls

Run test

npm test

Run build

npm run build

Libraries that use cutie

node-test-executor, cutie-is, cutie-assert, cutie-fs, cutie-http, cutie-https, cutie-rest, cutie-buffer, cutie-error, cutie-date, cutie-json, cutie-event, cutie-stream, cutie-object, cutie-process, cutie-iterator, cutie-path, cutie-if-else, cutie-cluster, page-static-generator and many others.