@iterables/sieve
v1.0.1
Published
split one iterable into two based on a test function
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@iterables/sieve
Sometimes you want to iterate over a set once and split the set into two separate usable piles.
This does that!
const sieve = require('@iterables/sieve')
const [yes, no] = sieve([1, 0, 1], (xs, idx, all) => {
return Boolean(xs)
})
console.log([...yes]) // [1, 1]
console.log([...no]) // [0]
// works with any iterable:
const [yes, no] = sieve(function * () {
yield 0
yield 1
yield 2
}(), xs => Boolean(xs))
console.log([...yes]) // [1, 2]
console.log([...no]) // [0]
Installation
$ npm install --save @iterables/sieve
API
sieve(iterable:Iterator<T>, test:Function) -> [Iterator<T>, Iterator<T>]
iterable
: any iterable (generator instance,Set
,Map
,Array
, etc.)test
: a function takingxs
,idx
, andall
, returningBoolean
xs
: an item fromiterable
.idx
: the index within the array.all
: the original iterable
Returns a two-element array of iterators. The first element, yes
, is an
iterable of all items from the original iterable that pass the test function.
The second element, no
, contains all the failing items.
Note: this function will buffer the skipped items in the second iterable to be
realized. That is, if you evaluate the yes
iterable all at once first, all
failing elements will be buffered in no
until it is iterated. Usually realizing
the array is the goal, so keeping the elements in memory shouldn't be an issue.
If memory is an issue, consider taking one element at a time from yes
and
no
, which will buffer at most N
items, where N
is the largest run of
all-passing or all-failing items.
License
MIT