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[RFC]: add @stdlib/iter/cunone-by #2337

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kgryte opened this issue Jun 8, 2024 · 6 comments · Fixed by #2783
Closed
3 tasks done

[RFC]: add @stdlib/iter/cunone-by #2337

kgryte opened this issue Jun 8, 2024 · 6 comments · Fixed by #2783
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Accepted RFC feature request which has been accepted. difficulty: 2 May require some initial design or R&D, but should be straightforward to resolve and/or implement. Feature Issue or pull request for adding a new feature. Good First Issue A good first issue for new contributors! JavaScript Issue involves or relates to JavaScript. priority: Normal Normal priority concern or feature request. RFC Request for comments. Feature requests and proposed changes.

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@kgryte
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kgryte commented Jun 8, 2024

Description

This RFC proposes adding the package @stdlib/iter/cunone-by, which cumulatively tests whether no iterated value passes a test implemented by a predicate function. The returned iterator should be a transform iterator, continuing to iterate while source iterator values are available.

var array2iterator = require( '@stdlib/array/to-iterator' );

function isPositive( value ) {
	return ( value > 0 );
}

var arr = array2iterator( [ 0, 0, 0, 1, 0 ] );

var it = iterCuNoneBy( arr, isPositive );

var v = it.next().value;
// returns true

v = it.next().value;
// returns true

v = it.next().value;
// returns true

v = it.next().value;
// returns false

v = it.next().value;
// returns false

var bool = it.next().done;
// returns true

The predicate function should be provided two arguments:

  • value: the iterated value.
  • index: iteration index (zero-based).

Related Issues

No.

Questions

No.

Other

  • See also @stdlib/iter/none-by

Checklist

  • I have read and understood the Code of Conduct.
  • Searched for existing issues and pull requests.
  • The issue name begins with RFC:.
@kgryte kgryte added RFC Request for comments. Feature requests and proposed changes. Feature Issue or pull request for adding a new feature. Accepted RFC feature request which has been accepted. Good First Issue A good first issue for new contributors! priority: Normal Normal priority concern or feature request. JavaScript Issue involves or relates to JavaScript. difficulty: 2 May require some initial design or R&D, but should be straightforward to resolve and/or implement. labels Jun 8, 2024
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@kgryte

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@kgryte kgryte added Good First Issue A good first issue for new contributors! and removed Good First Issue A good first issue for new contributors! labels Aug 2, 2024
@stdlib-bot
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🚨 Important: PLEASE READ 🚨

This issue has been labeled as a good first issue and is available for anyone to work on.

If this is your first time contributing to an open source project, some aspects of the development process may seem unusual, arcane, or some combination of both.

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Before working on this issue and opening a pull request, please read the project's contributing guidelines. These guidelines and the associated development guide provide important information, including links to stdlib's Code of Conduct, license policy, and steps for setting up your local development environment.

To reiterate, we strongly encourage you to refer to our contributing guides before beginning work on this issue. Failure to follow our guidelines significantly decreases the likelihood that you'll successfully contribute to stdlib and may result in automatic closure of a pull request without review.

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We place a high value on consistency throughout the stdlib codebase. We encourage you to closely examine other packages in stdlib and attempt to emulate the practices and conventions found therein.

  • If you are attempting to contribute a new package, sometimes the best approach is to simply copy the contents of an existing package and then modify the minimum amount necessary to implement the feature (e.g., changing descriptions, parameter names, and implementation).
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In short, the more effort you put in to ensure that your contribution looks and feels like stdlib—including variables names, bracket spacing, line breaks, etc—the more likely that your contribution will be reviewed and ultimately accepted. We encourage you to closely study the codebase before beginning work on this issue.

✨ Thank you again for your interest in stdlib, and we look forward to reviewing your future contriubtions. ✨

@chiru200513
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i would like to start working on this feature . is there anyone currently working on it or can i start ?
And also how about the below code?
function iterCuNoneBy(iterator, predicate) {
let cumulative = true; // Start assuming that no elements satisfy the predicate

return {
    next: function() {
        const next = iterator.next();
        if (next.done) {
            return { value: undefined, done: true };
        }

        // If any element satisfies the predicate, cumulative becomes false
        if (cumulative && predicate(next.value)) {
            cumulative = false;
        }

        return { value: cumulative, done: false };
    }
};

}

module.exports = iterCuNoneBy;

Kaif987 added a commit to Kaif987/stdlib that referenced this issue Aug 12, 2024
This commit adds support for creating a
function  which returns an iterator
which cumulatively tests whether no iterated
value passes a test implemented by a predicate function

Fixes: stdlib-js#2337
Private-ref:stdlib-js#2337
@kgryte kgryte closed this as completed in c0de83a Aug 15, 2024
gunjjoshi pushed a commit to gunjjoshi/stdlib that referenced this issue Aug 21, 2024
PR-URL: stdlib-js#2783
Closes: stdlib-js#2337
Co-authored-by: Athan Reines <[email protected]>
Reviewed-by: Athan Reines <[email protected]>
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Labels
Accepted RFC feature request which has been accepted. difficulty: 2 May require some initial design or R&D, but should be straightforward to resolve and/or implement. Feature Issue or pull request for adding a new feature. Good First Issue A good first issue for new contributors! JavaScript Issue involves or relates to JavaScript. priority: Normal Normal priority concern or feature request. RFC Request for comments. Feature requests and proposed changes.
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