many-keys-map
v2.0.1
Published
A `Map` subclass with support for multiple keys for one entry.
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many-keys-map
A
Map
subclass with support for multiple keys for one entry.
A ManyKeysMap
object is identical to a regular Map
, with the exception that it only supports a sequence of keys as key, instead of a single key. This will let you attach a value to a specific combination of keys, instead of a single key.
const regularMap = new Map();
regularMap.set('hello', true);
const manyKeysMap = new ManyKeysMap();
manyKeysMap.set(['hello', 'world'], true);
This is useful when the keys cannot be easily combined (i.e. object)
const handlers = new ManyKeysMap();
handlers.set([element, 'click'], onClickFn);
handlers.set([element, 'keypress', {passive: true}], onKeypressFn);
// Since objects are stored by reference, it’s best to stringify `options` object like the above
handlers.set([element, 'keypress', JSON.stringify({passive: true})], onKeypressFn);
The number of keys allowed is unlimited and their order matters.
Install
$ npm install many-keys-map
Usage
It should work exactly the same as a Map
, except that the key
must always be an array.
import ManyKeysMap from 'many-keys-map';
const groups = new ManyKeysMap();
groups.set([header, 'admin'], true);
groups.set([target, 'tools'], [1, 'any value is supported']);
const data = new ManyKeysMap([
[['hello key'], 'value'],
[[42, null], new Date()]
]);
data.get(['hello key']);
// => 'value'
data.get([42, null]);
// => date Object
data.get(['42']);
// => undefined
data.has([Symbol()]);
// => false
for (const [keys, value] of data) {
console.log(keys);
console.log(value);
}
// => ['hello key']
// => 'value'
// => [42, null]
// => date Object
Allowed keys
- Keys must always be an array, e.g.
.set([a, b], 'hello')
- Only the values in the
keys
array are stored, not the array itself — so future changes to the array won’t be reflected in the map. ManyKeysMap
supports any number of keys, any of these are valid and different:.get([a])
and.get([a, b, c, d, e, f, g])
- The order of keys matters, so
.get([a, b])
is different from.get([b, a])
- The keys can be anything supported by
Map
.
Related
- many-keys-weakmap - A
WeakMap
subclass with support for multiple keys for one entry.