lang
Language Utilities. Easier inheritance, scope handling, type checks.
Table of Contents #
- clone()
- createObject()
- ctorApply()
- defaults()
- inheritPrototype()
- isArguments()
- isArray()
- isBoolean()
- isDate()
- isEmpty()
- isFinite()
- isFunction()
- isKind()
- isNaN()
- isNull()
- isNumber()
- isObject()
- isRegExp()
- isString()
- isUndefined()
- kindOf()
- toArray()
clone(val):* #
Deep clone native types like Object, Array, RegExp, Date and primitives.
Example
var a = {foo:'bar', obj: {a:1, b:2}}; var b = clone(a); // {foo:'bar', obj: {a:1, b:2}} console.log( a === b ); // false console.log( a.obj === b.obj ); // false var c = [1, 2, [3, 4]]; var d = clone(c); // [1, 2, [3, 4]] var e = c.concat(); // [1, 2, [3, 4]] console.log( c[2] === d[2] ); // false // concat doesn't do a deep clone, arrays are passed by reference console.log( e[2] === d[2] ); // true
createObject(parent, [props]):Object #
Create Object using prototypal inheritance and setting custom properties.
Mix between Douglas Crockford Prototypal Inheritance and the EcmaScript 5 Object.create()
method.
Arguments
parent
(Object) : Parent Object[props]
(Object) : Object properties
Example
var base = { trace : function(){ console.log(this.name); } }; var myObj = createObject(base, { name : 'Lorem Ipsum' }); myObject.trace(); // "Lorem Ipsum"
ctorApply(constructor, args):Object #
Do Function.prototype.apply()
on a constructor while maintaining prototype
chain.
function Person(name, surname) { this.name = name; this.surname = surname; } Person.prototype.walk = function(){ console.log(this.name +' is walking'); }; var args = ['John', 'Doe']; // "similar" effect as calling `new Person("John", "Doe")` var john = ctorApply(Person, args); john.walk(); // "John is walking"
defaults(val, ...defaults):void #
Return first value that isn't null
or undefined
.
function doSomethingAwesome(foo, bar) {
// default arguments
foo = defaults(foo, 'lorem');
bar = defaults(bar, 123);
// ...
}
inheritPrototype(child, parent):void #
Inherit prototype from another Object.
function Foo(name){ this.name = name; } Foo.prototype = { getName : function(){ return this.name; } }; function Bar(name){ this.name = name; } //should be called before calling constructor inheritPrototype(Bar, Foo); var myObj = new Bar('lorem ipsum'); myObj.getName(); // "lorem ipsum"
isArguments(val):Boolean #
If value is an "Arguments" object.
isArray(val):Boolean #
If value is an Array. Uses native ES5 Array.isArray()
if available.
isBoolean(val):Boolean #
If value is a Boolean.
isDate(val):Boolean #
If value is a Date.
isEmpty(val):Boolean #
Checks if Array/Object/String is empty.
isEmpty(''); // true isEmpty('bar'); // false isEmpty([]); // true isEmpty([1, 2]); // false isEmpty({}); // true isEmpty({a:1, b:2}); // false
isFinite(val):Boolean #
Checks if value is Finite.
Note: This is not the same as native isFinite
, which will return true
for
booleans and empty strings. See http://es5.github.com/#x15.1.2.5.
isFunction(val):Boolean #
If value is a Function.
isKind(val, kind):Boolean #
If value is of "kind". (used internally by some of the isSomething checks).
Favor the other methods since strings are commonly mistyped and also because
some "kinds" can only be accurately checked by using other methods (e.g.
Arguments
), some of the other checks are also faster.
isKind([1,2], 'Array'); // true isKind(3, 'Array'); // false isKind(3, 'Number'); // true
See: kindOf()
isNaN(val):Boolean #
Check if value is NaN
.
Note: This is not the same as native isNaN
, which will return true
for
undefined
and other values. See ES5 isNaN
isNull(val):Boolean #
If value is null
.
isNumber(val):Boolean #
If value is a Number.
isObject(val):Boolean #
If value is an Object.
isRegExp(val):Boolean #
If value is a RegExp.
isString(val):Boolean #
If value is a String.
isUndefined(val):Boolean #
If value is undefined
.
kindOf(val):String #
Gets kind of value (e.g. "String", "Number", "RegExp", "Null", "Date").
Used internally by isKind()
and most of the other isSomething checks.
kindOf([1,2]); // "Array" kindOf('foo'); // "String" kindOf(3); // "Number"
See: isKind()
toArray(val):Array #
Convert array-like object into Array or wrap value into Array.
toArray({ "0" : "foo", "1" : "bar", "length" : 2 }); // ["foo", "bar"] function foo(){ return toArray(arguments); } foo("lorem", 123); // ["lorem", 123] toArray("lorem ipsum"); // ["lorem ipsum"] toArray(window); // [window] toArray({foo:"bar", lorem:123}); // [{foo:"bar", lorem:123}]
See: object/values()
For more usage examples check specs inside /tests
folder. Unit tests are the
best documentation you can get...
Documentation generated by mdoc.