/* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public * License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this * file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */ // Disclaimer: Some of the functions in this module implement APIs from // Jeremy Ashkenas's http://underscorejs.org/ library and all credits for // those goes to him. "use strict"; module.metadata = { "stability": "unstable" } const { arity, name, derive, invoke } = require("./helpers"); /** * Takes variadic numeber of functions and returns composed one. * Returned function pushes `this` pseudo-variable to the head * of the passed arguments and invokes all the functions from * left to right passing same arguments to them. Composite function * returns return value of the right most funciton. */ const method = (...lambdas) => { return function method(...args) { args.unshift(this); return lambdas.reduce((_, lambda) => lambda.apply(this, args), void(0)); }; }; exports.method = method; /** * Invokes `callee` by passing `params` as an arguments and `self` as `this` * pseudo-variable. Returns value that is returned by a callee. * @param {Function} callee * Function to invoke. * @param {Array} params * Arguments to invoke function with. * @param {Object} self * Object to be passed as a `this` pseudo variable. */ exports.invoke = invoke; /** * Takes a function and bind values to one or more arguments, returning a new * function of smaller arity. * * @param {Function} fn * The function to partial * * @returns The new function with binded values */ const partial = (f, ...curried) => { if (typeof(f) !== "function") throw new TypeError(String(f) + " is not a function"); let fn = derive(function(...args) { return f.apply(this, curried.concat(args)); }, f); fn.arity = arity(f) - curried.length; return fn; }; exports.partial = partial; /** * Returns function with implicit currying, which will continue currying until * expected number of argument is collected. Expected number of arguments is * determined by `fn.length`. Using this with variadic functions is stupid, * so don't do it. * * @examples * * var sum = curry(function(a, b) { * return a + b * }) * console.log(sum(2, 2)) // 4 * console.log(sum(2)(4)) // 6 */ const curry = new function() { const currier = (fn, arity, params) => { // Function either continues to curry arguments or executes function // if desired arguments have being collected. const curried = function(...input) { // Prepend all curried arguments to the given arguments. if (params) input.unshift.apply(input, params); // If expected number of arguments has being collected invoke fn, // othrewise return curried version Otherwise continue curried. return (input.length >= arity) ? fn.apply(this, input) : currier(fn, arity, input); }; curried.arity = arity - (params ? params.length : 0); return curried; }; return fn => currier(fn, arity(fn)); }; exports.curry = curry; /** * Returns the composition of a list of functions, where each function consumes * the return value of the function that follows. In math terms, composing the * functions `f()`, `g()`, and `h()` produces `f(g(h()))`. * @example * * var greet = function(name) { return "hi: " + name; }; * var exclaim = function(statement) { return statement + "!"; }; * var welcome = compose(exclaim, greet); * * welcome('moe'); // => 'hi: moe!' */ function compose(...lambdas) { return function composed(...args) { let index = lambdas.length; while (0 <= --index) args = [lambdas[index].apply(this, args)]; return args[0]; }; } exports.compose = compose; /* * Returns the first function passed as an argument to the second, * allowing you to adjust arguments, run code before and after, and * conditionally execute the original function. * @example * * var hello = function(name) { return "hello: " + name; }; * hello = wrap(hello, function(f) { * return "before, " + f("moe") + ", after"; * }); * * hello(); // => 'before, hello: moe, after' */ const wrap = (f, wrapper) => derive(function wrapped(...args) { return wrapper.apply(this, [f].concat(args)); }, f); exports.wrap = wrap; /** * Returns the same value that is used as the argument. In math: f(x) = x */ const identity = value => value; exports.identity = identity; /** * Memoizes a given function by caching the computed result. Useful for * speeding up slow-running computations. If passed an optional hashFunction, * it will be used to compute the hash key for storing the result, based on * the arguments to the original function. The default hashFunction just uses * the first argument to the memoized function as the key. */ const memoize = (f, hasher) => { let memo = Object.create(null); let cache = new WeakMap(); hasher = hasher || identity; return derive(function memoizer(...args) { const key = hasher.apply(this, args); const type = typeof(key); if (key && (type === "object" || type === "function")) { if (!cache.has(key)) cache.set(key, f.apply(this, args)); return cache.get(key); } else { if (!(key in memo)) memo[key] = f.apply(this, args); return memo[key]; } }, f); }; exports.memoize = memoize; /* * Creates a version of the function that can only be called one time. Repeated * calls to the modified function will have no effect, returning the value from * the original call. Useful for initialization functions, instead of having to * set a boolean flag and then check it later. */ const once = f => { let ran = false, cache; return derive(function(...args) { return ran ? cache : (ran = true, cache = f.apply(this, args)); }, f); }; exports.once = once; // export cache as once will may be conflicting with event once a lot. exports.cache = once; // Takes a `f` function and returns a function that takes the same // arguments as `f`, has the same effects, if any, and returns the // opposite truth value. const complement = f => derive(function(...args) { return args.length < arity(f) ? complement(partial(f, ...args)) : !f.apply(this, args); }, f); exports.complement = complement; // Constructs function that returns `x` no matter what is it // invoked with. const constant = x => _ => x; exports.constant = constant; // Takes `p` predicate, `consequent` function and an optional // `alternate` function and composes function that returns // application of arguments over `consequent` if application over // `p` is `true` otherwise returns application over `alternate`. // If `alternate` is not a function returns `undefined`. const when = (p, consequent, alternate) => { if (typeof(alternate) !== "function" && alternate !== void(0)) throw TypeError("alternate must be a function"); if (typeof(consequent) !== "function") throw TypeError("consequent must be a function"); return function(...args) { return p.apply(this, args) ? consequent.apply(this, args) : alternate && alternate.apply(this, args); }; }; exports.when = when; // Apply function that behaves as `apply` does in lisp: // apply(f, x, [y, z]) => f.apply(f, [x, y, z]) // apply(f, x) => f.apply(f, [x]) const apply = (f, ...rest) => f.apply(f, rest.concat(rest.pop())); exports.apply = apply; // Returns function identical to given `f` but with flipped order // of arguments. const flip = f => derive(function(...args) { return f.apply(this, args.reverse()); }, f); exports.flip = flip; // Takes field `name` and `target` and returns value of that field. // If `target` is `null` or `undefined` it would be returned back // instead of attempt to access it's field. Function is implicitly // curried, this allows accessor function generation by calling it // with only `name` argument. const field = curry((name, target) => // Note: Permisive `==` is intentional. target == null ? target : target[name]); exports.field = field; // Takes `.` delimited string representing `path` to a nested field // and a `target` to get it from. For convinience function is // implicitly curried, there for accessors can be created by invoking // it with just a `path` argument. const query = curry((path, target) => { const names = path.split("."); const count = names.length; let index = 0; let result = target; // Note: Permisive `!=` is intentional. while (result != null && index < count) { result = result[names[index]]; index = index + 1; } return result; }); exports.query = query; // Takes `Type` (constructor function) and a `value` and returns // `true` if `value` is instance of the given `Type`. Function is // implicitly curried this allows predicate generation by calling // function with just first argument. const isInstance = curry((Type, value) => value instanceof Type); exports.isInstance = isInstance; /* * Takes a funtion and returns a wrapped function that returns `this` */ const chainable = f => derive(function(...args) { f.apply(this, args); return this; }, f); exports.chainable = chainable; // Functions takes `expected` and `actual` values and returns `true` if // `expected === actual`. Returns curried function if called with less then // two arguments. // // [ 1, 0, 1, 0, 1 ].map(is(1)) // => [ true, false, true, false, true ] const is = curry((expected, actual) => actual === expected); exports.is = is; const isnt = complement(is); exports.isnt = isnt;