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matchit

v1.1.0

Published

Quickly parse & match URLs

Downloads

1,611,579

Readme

matchit Build Status

Quickly parse & match URLs

Install

$ npm install --save matchit

Usage

const { exec, match, parse } = require('matchit');

parse('/foo/:bar/:baz?');
//=> [
//=>   { old:'/foo/:bar', type:0, val:'foo' },
//=>   { old:'/foo/:bar', type:1, val:'bar' },
//=>   { old:'/foo/:bar', type:3, val:'baz' }
//=> ]

const routes = ['/', '/foo', 'bar', '/baz', '/baz/:title','/bat/*'].map(parse);

match('/', routes);
//=> [{ old:'/', type:0, val:'/' }]

match('/foo', routes);
//=> [{ old:'/foo', type:0, val:'foo' }]

match('/bar', routes);
//=> [{ old:'bar', type:0, val:'bar' }]

match('/baz', routes);
//=> [{ old:'/baz', type:0, val:'baz' }]

let a = match('/baz/hello', routes);
//=> [{...}, {...}]
let b = exec('/baz/hello', a);
//=> { title:'hello' }

match('/bat/quz/qut', routes);
//=> [
//=>   { old:'/bat/*', type:0, val:'bat' },
//=>   { old:'/bat/*', type:2, val:'*' }
//=> ]

API

matchit.parse(route)

Returns: Array

The route is split and parsed into a "definition" array of objects. Each object ("segment") contains a val, type, and old key:

  • old — The route's original value
  • type — An numerical representation of the segment type.
    • 0 - static
    • 1 - parameter
    • 2 - any/wildcard
    • 3 - optional param
  • val — The current segment's value. This is either a static value of the name of a parameter

route

Type: String

A single URL pattern.

Note: Input will be stripped of all leading & trailing / characters, so there's no need to normalize your own URLs before passing it to parse!

matchit.match(url, routes)

Returns: Array

Returns the route's encoded definition. See matchit.parse.

url

Type: String

The true URL you want to be matched.

routes

Type: Array

All "parsed" route definitions, via matchit.parse.

Important: Multiple routes will require an Array of matchit.parse outputs.

matchit.exec(url, match)

Returns: Object

Returns an object an object of key:val pairs, as defined by your route pattern.

url

Type: String

The URL (pathname) to evaluate.

Important: This should be pathnames only as any querystrings will be included the response.

match

Type: Array

The route definition to use, via matchit.match.

Benchmarks

Running Node v10.13.0

# Parsing
  matchit               x 1,489,482 ops/sec ±2.89% (97 runs sampled)
  regexparam            x   406,824 ops/sec ±1.38% (96 runs sampled)
  path-to-regexp        x    83,439 ops/sec ±0.89% (96 runs sampled)
  path-to-regexp.parse  x   421,266 ops/sec ±0.13% (97 runs sampled)

# Match (index)
  matchit                x 132,338,546 ops/sec ±0.14% (96 runs sampled)
  regexparam             x  49,889,162 ops/sec ±0.21% (95 runs sampled)
  path-to-regexp.exec    x   7,176,721 ops/sec ±1.23% (94 runs sampled)
  path-to-regexp.tokens  x     102,021 ops/sec ±0.21% (96 runs sampled)

# Match (param)
  matchit                x 2,700,618 ops/sec ±0.92% (95 runs sampled)
  regexparam             x 6,924,653 ops/sec ±0.33% (94 runs sampled)
  path-to-regexp.exec    x 4,715,483 ops/sec ±0.28% (96 runs sampled)
  path-to-regexp.tokens  x    98,182 ops/sec ±0.45% (93 runs sampled)

# Match (optional)
  matchit                x 2,816,313 ops/sec ±0.64% (93 runs sampled)
  regexparam             x 8,437,064 ops/sec ±0.41% (93 runs sampled)
  path-to-regexp.exec    x 5,909,510 ops/sec ±0.22% (97 runs sampled)
  path-to-regexp.tokens  x   101,832 ops/sec ±0.43% (98 runs sampled)

# Match (wildcard)
  matchit                x 3,409,100 ops/sec ±0.34% (98 runs sampled)
  regexparam             x 9,740,429 ops/sec ±0.49% (95 runs sampled)
  path-to-regexp.exec    x 8,740,590 ops/sec ±0.43% (89 runs sampled)
  path-to-regexp.tokens  x   102,109 ops/sec ±0.35% (96 runs sampled)

# Exec
  matchit         x 1,558,321 ops/sec ±0.33% (96 runs sampled)
  regexparam      x 6,966,297 ops/sec ±0.21% (97 runs sampled)
  path-to-regexp  x   102,250 ops/sec ±0.45% (95 runs sampled)

Related

  • regexparam - A similar (285B) utility, but relies on RegExp instead of String comparisons.

License

MIT © Luke Edwards