This is an experimental library that will allow object matching based on a simple query language plus chainable function interface.
- The equality operator
==
is now a case-senstive match - A loose equality operator
~=
can be used for case insensitive matches. - Regex operators are now implemented using
=?
for a match and!?
for not.
==
- equality!=
- inequality=~
- loose equality (case insensitive string matching)!~
- loose inequality>
- greater than>=
- greater or equal to<
- less than<=
- less than or equal to=?
- regex equality!?
- regex inequality
Matching is done at an object level against object properties, e.g.
var matchme = require('matchme');
var test = { name: 'Ted', age: 40 };
console.log(matchme(test, 'name == Ted'));
// --> true
console.log(matchme(test, 'name == ted'));
// --> false
console.log(matchme(test, 'name ~= ted'));
// --> true
console.log(matchme(test, 'age > 25'));
// --> true
console.log(matchme(test, 'name ~= ted && age > 45'));
// --> false
In addition matchme
can be used in conjunction the filter
function (both the native JS implemenation or underscores):
var matchme = require('matchme');
var people = [
{ name: 'Ted', age: 40 },
{ name: 'Bill', age: 42 }
];
console.log(people.filter(matchme.filter('age > 40')));
// --> [ { name: 'Bill', age: 42 }]
An example using the pull-stream module is shown below. This example reads data from a data file downloaded from geonames and loaded in through the geonames module which provides a pull-stream source.
var geonames = require('geonames');
var pull = require('pull-stream');
var matchme = require('matchme');
console.log('Places with a population > 500,000 (limited to first 10):');
pull(
geonames.read(__dirname + '/data/AU.txt'),
pull.filter(matchme.filter('featureClass == P && population > 500000')),
pull.take(10),
pull.drain(function(place) {
console.log(place.name);
})
);
Additionally, here is another example that uses a matchme regex to identify places that are named as Islands but are classified as something else:
var geonames = require('geonames');
var pull = require('pull-stream');
var matchme = require('matchme');
pull(
geonames.read(__dirname + '/data/AU.txt'),
pull.filter(matchme.filter('name =? /Island$/ && featureCode != ISL')),
pull.drain(function(place) {
console.log(place.name + ' might seem like an island but is in fact a ' + place.featureCode);
})
);
The matchme
module uses eval
as it's highly pragmatic in this situation.
Feel free to create breaking tests if you think there are exploite introduced
from it's use.
Check whether the specified property of the target object is greater than
the specified value. If the optional result argument is passed to the
function then the result is passed back in that object. If not the result
is stored in the local ok
property of the matcher instance. Other
comparison methods use the same principle as this function.
Greater than or equal to check.
Less than property value check
Less than or equal to check
Equality check
Equality check (case insensitive)
Copyright (c) 2014 Damon Oehlman [email protected]
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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