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Node.js mixme

Build Status

Merge multiple object recursively, with TypeScript support. The last object takes precedence over the previous ones. Only objects are merged. Arrays are overwritten.

  • Zero dependencies
  • Small size
  • Pure functions
  • ESM and CommonJS support

API

The API is minimalist. The most popular functions are merge, mutate and is_object_literal.

Function camelize(object)

Clone a object and convert its properties into snake case.

import { snake_case } from "mixme"

snake_case({aA: "1", bB: cC: "2"})
// Return {a_a: "1", b_b: c_c: "2"}

Function camelize_str(str)

Convert a camel case string to snake case, used internally by snake_case.

import { snake_case_str } from "mixme"

snake_case("myValue")
// Return "my_value"

Function compare(item_1, item_2)

Compare two items and return true if their values match.

import { compare } from "mixme"

compare([{a: 1}], [{a: 1}])
// Return true

compare({a: 1}, {a: 2})
// Return false

Function clone(data)

It is possible to clone a literal object by simply calling mixme with this object as the first argument. Use the clone function in case you wish to clone any type of argument including arrays:

import { clone } from "mixme"

const target = clone(["a", "b"])
// target is now a copy of source

Function is_object_literal(object)

Use the is_object_literal function to ensure an object is literate.

import { is_object_literal } from "mixme"

// {} is literate
is_object_literal({})

// error is not literate
is_object_literal(new Error("Catch me"))

// Array is not literate
is_object_literal([])

Function merge(...data)

The API is minimalist, Merge all literal object provided as arguments. This function is immutable, the source objects won't be altered.

import { merge } from "mixme"

const target = merge({a: "1"}, {b: "2"});
// target is {a: "1", b: "2"}

Function mutate(...data)

Use the mutate function to enrich an object. The first argument will be mutated:

import { mutate } from "mixme"

const source = {a: "1"};
const target = mutate(source, {b: "2"});
target.c = "3";
// source and target are both {a: "1", b: "2", c: "3"}

Function snake_case(object)

Clone a object and convert its properties into snake case.

import { snake_case } from "mixme"

snake_case({aA: "1", bB: cC: "2"})
// Return {a_a: "1", b_b: c_c: "2"}

Function snake_case_str(str)

Convert a camel case string to snake case, used internally by snake_case.

import { snake_case_str } from "mixme"

snake_case("myValue")
// Return "my_value"

Example

Create a new object from two objects:

import { merge } from "mixme"

const obj1 = { a_key: "a value", b_key: "b value"}
const obj2 = { b_key: "new b value"}
const result = merge(obj1, obj2)

assert.eql(result.b_key, "new b value")

Merge an existing object with a second one:

import { mutate } from "mixme"

const obj1 = { a_key: "a value", b_key: "b value"};
const obj2 = { b_key: "new b value"};
const result = mutate(obj1, obj2)

assert.eql(result, obj1)
assert.eql(obj1.b_key, "new b value")

Testing

Clone the repo, install the development dependencies and run the tests:

git clone http://github.com/wdavidw/node-mixme.git .
npm install
npm run test

Developers

To automatically generate a new version:

yarn run release

Package publication is handled by the CI/CD with GitHub action.

Note:

  • On release, both the publish and test workflows run in parallel. Not very happy about it but I haven't found a better way.
  • yarn does not call the "postrelease" script and npm fails if the package-lock.json file is present and git ignored.

Contributors

This package is developed by Adaltas.