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allthethings

v0.0.1-alpha-8

Published

Let your iterations read like actual sentences.

Readme

Build Status

ALLTHETHINGS.JS

ALLTHETHINGS.JS

Let your iterations read like actual sentences:

doSomethingTo.allThe(things);

Instead of coding like Yoda...

things.forEach(doSomething);

For no extra cost, you also get 'fromThe':

var proHackers = filterNoobs.fromThe(hackers);

And all for less than 1KB, with no dependencies. Delicious.

Gimme gimme

Node.js

Install with: npm install allthethings

require('allthethings');

Browser

Download the production version or the development version.

forEach / map

By default, 'allThe' performs a 'map' on the array, which doubles as a 'forEach':

forEach

var words = ['all', 'the', 'things'];

function shout(word) {
	return alert(word);
}

shout.allThe(words);

map

var numbers = [1,2,3];

function triple(number) {
	return number * 3;
}

var multiplesOfThree = triple.allThe(numbers); // [3,6,9]

filter

If your named function starts with 'filter' or 'is', then a filter is performed.

When filtering, it's idiomatic to use 'fromThe' instead of 'allThe':

var numbers = [-2,-1,0,1,2];

function filterNegatives(number) {
	return number >= 0;
}

filterNegatives.fromThe(numbers); // [0,1,2]
var numbers = [-2,-1,0,1,2];

function isPositive(number) {
	return number > 0;
}

isPositive.fromThe(numbers); // [1,2]

reduce

If your named function starts with 'reduce', 'calculate' or 'add', then a reduce is performed.

When reducing, it's idiomatic to use 'fromThe' instead of 'allThe':

Given the 'numbers' array:

var numbers = [1,2,3];

Any of these will work identically:

function reduceTotal(a, b) {
	return a + b;
}

var total = reduceTotal.fromThe(numbers); // 6
function calculateTotal(a, b) {
	return a + b;
}

var total = calculateTotal.fromThe(numbers); // 6
function addTotal(a, b) {
	return a + b;
}

var total = addTotal.fromThe(numbers); // 6

Contributing

In lieu of a formal styleguide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality. Lint and test your code using grunt.

License

Copyright (c) 2012 Mark Dalgleish
Licensed under the MIT license.