This repository exists solely as the source of truth for Capnp-JS Transform patterns.
Consider the SugarlessIterator
interface:
interface SugarlessIterator<Value> {
next(): SugarlessIteratorResult<Value>;
}
type SugarlessIteratorResult<Value> = { done: true | Error } | { done: false, value: Value };
An iterator transform exposes a sugarless iterator over some Input
type as an
iterator over some Output
type:
type IteratorTransform<Input, Output> = (source: SugarlessIterator<Input>) => SugarlessIterator<Output>;
This arrangement allows each transform to reuse a single, relatively small
buffer to transmit data through a chain of transformations with minimal memory
use.
Unless documented otherwise, every time a transform calls its source's next()
method, that transform should anticipate that the input from the prior next()
call has become corrupted.
These are actually pull streams with naming kinda borrowed from the pull streams link and from this paper.
Consider the Source
interface:
type Source<Output> = (abort: null | true, put: (done: null | (true | Error), value: Output) => void) => void;
An asynchronous iterator transform exposes a source of some Input
type as a
source over some Output
type:
type AsyncIteratorTransform<Input, Output> = (source: Source<Input>) => Source<Output>;
This arrangement allows each transform to reuse a single, relatively small
buffer to transmit data through a chain of transformations with minimal memory
use.
Unless documented otherwise, every time a transform calls its source's next()
method, that transform should anticipate that the input from the prior next()
call has become corrupted.
Source consumers are called sinks, and they have the following shape:
type Sink<Input> = (source: Source<Input>) => void;