/get-wild

Extract nested properties from an object with support for wildcards

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

get-wild

Build Status NPM Version

NAME

get-wild - extract nested properties from an object with support for wildcards

FEATURES

  • configurable wildcard support, e.g. "foo.*.bar"
  • support for negative array indices, e.g. "foo[-1].bar"
  • pluggable path parser
  • no dependencies
  • < 800 B minified + gzipped
  • curried (data last) versions for functional programming
  • fully typed (TypeScript)
  • CDN builds (UMD) - jsDelivr, unpkg

INSTALLATION

$ npm install get-wild

SYNOPSIS

import { get } from 'get-wild'

const obj = { foo: { bar: { baz: 'quux' } } }

get(obj, 'foo.bar.baz')               // "quux"
get(obj, 'foo.fizz.buzz')             // undefined
get(obj, 'foo.fizz.buzz', 42)         // 42
get(obj, ['foo', 'bar', 'baz'])       // "quux"
get(obj, ['foo', 'fizz', 'buzz'], 42) // 42

Negative array indices

const array = [
    [{ value: 1 }, { value: 2 }, { value: 3 }],
    [{ value: 4 }, { value: 5 }, { value: 6 }],
    [{ value: 7 }, { value: 8 }, { value: 9 }],
]

get(array, '[1][-2].value')   // 5
get(array, [-1, -1, 'value']) // 9

Wildcards

const data = {
    users: {
        'abc123': {
            name: 'John Doe',
            homepage: 'https://example.com/john-doe',
            hobbies: ['eating', 'sleeping'],
        },
        'def345': {
            name: 'Jane Doe',
            homepage: 'https://example.com/jane-doe',
        },
        'ghi567': {
            name: 'Nemo',
            hobbies: ['singing', 'dancing'],
        },
    }
}

get(data, 'users[0].name')  // "John Doe"
get(data, 'users[-1].name') // "Nemo"
get(data, 'users.*.name')   // ["John Doe", "Jane Doe", "Nemo"]

get(data, 'users.*.homepage')
// ["https://example.com/john-doe", "https://example.com/jane-doe", undefined]

// also works with arrays
get(array, '[1].*.value')  // [4, 5, 6]
get(array, '[-1].*.value') // [7, 8, 9]

Flatten results

get(data, 'users.*.hobbies')
// ["eating", "sleeping", undefined, "singing", "dancing"]

Remove missing results

get(data, 'users.*.hobbies', [])
// ["eating", "sleeping", "singing", "dancing"]

Raw results

get(data, 'users.**.hobbies')
// [["eating", "sleeping"], undefined, ["singing", "dancing"]]

DESCRIPTION

This module exports a function which can be used to extract nested properties from an object, including arrays and any other non-falsey values. This is similar to the get function provided by Lodash (and many other libraries), but it adds the following features:

  • wildcard support, e.g. "foo.*.bar.*.baz"
  • support for negative array indices, e.g. "foo[-1][-2]"

In addition to the default get implementation, get-wild exports a builder function (getter) which can be used to create a custom get with different options baked in, as well as curried (data last) versions of get and getter to facilitate functional composition and reuse.

Why?

I needed a small, dependency-free version of Lodash.get with wildcard support, and preferably with an option to filter out/exclude missing values. Although there are a huge number of get implementations on NPM, I could only find one or two with wildcard support and none that are standalone/dependency-free.

Why not?

If you don't need support for wildcards, negative array-indices, or other options, there are smaller implementations, e.g. dlv.

TYPES

The following types are referenced in the descriptions below.

type Options = {
    collect?: Collect;
    default?: any;
    flatMap?: PropertyKey | false;
    map?: PropertyKey | false;
    parser?: string | Parser;
    split?: Options['parser'];
}

interface Collect {
    (value: {}) => Array<any>;
    (value: {}, index: number) => ArrayLike<any>;
}

type Parser = (path: string) => Array<PropertyKey>;
type Path = PropertyKey | Array<PropertyKey>;

EXPORTS

get-wild

get

  • Type: <T = any>(obj: any, path: Path, $default?: any) => T
import { get } from 'get-wild'

get(obj, 'foo.*.bar', [])

Takes an object, a path and an optional default value, and returns the value(s) found in the object at the specified path, or the default value (which is undefined by default) if the path doesn't exist or the value is undefined. The path can be supplied as a dotted expression (string), symbol or number, or an array of strings, symbols or numbers.

The syntax of dotted path expressions mostly matches that of regular JavaScript path expressions, with a few additions.

If there are no steps in the path, the object itself is returned (or the default value if the object is undefined).

Wildcard matching is performed by collecting an array of values at the wildcard's location and recursively getting the remainder of the path from each value. Wildcards can be used at any locations in a path to turn a single lookup into an array of lookup results for values at that location.

The values returned by wildcard matches can be customized. By default, * flattens the results (using flatMap), while ** uses map, which returns the results verbatim, though this mapping can be configured (or disabled) via the map and flatMap options.

The get export is generated by a builder function, getter, which can be used to create a custom get function with different options.

getter

  • Type: (options?: Options) => <T = any>(obj: any, path: Path, $default?: any) => T
import { getter } from 'get-wild'

const get = getter({ split: '/' })
const obj = { foo: { bar: { baz: 42 } } }

get(obj, 'foo/bar/baz') // 42

getter is a function which is used to build get functions. The default get export is generated by calling getter with no arguments, which uses the following default options:

    {
        collect: Object.values,
        default: undefined,
        flatMap: '*',
        map: '**',
        split: defaultParser,
    }

The behavior of get can be configured by generating a custom version which overrides these defaults, e.g.:

import { getter } from 'get-wild'

const split = path => path.split('/')
const get = getter({ split })

get(obj, 'foo/bar/*/quux')

split

  • Type: Parser
  • Aliases: parse, parser
import { getter, split } from 'get-wild'
import memoize from '@example/memoizer'

const memoized = memoize(split)
const get = getter({ split: memoized })

get(obj, '...')

The default function used by get to turn a path expression (string) into an array of steps (strings, symbols or numbers).

The array is not mutated, so, e.g., the function can be memoized to avoid re-parsing long/frequently-used paths. Alternatively, the path can be pre-parsed into an array (this is done automatically if the curried versions are used).

Syntax

The parser supports an extended version of JavaScript's native path syntax, e.g. the path:

`a[-1].b[42].-1.42["c.d"].e['f g'].*.h["i \\"j\\" k"]['']`

is parsed into the following steps:

['a', -1, 'b', 42, '-1', '42', 'c.d', 'e', 'f g', '*', 'h', 'i "j" k', '']

Properties are either unquoted names (strings), bracketed integers, or bracketed single or double-quoted strings. Integers can be signed (-1, +42) or unsigned (42). Unquoted names can contain any characters apart from spaces (\s), ", ', `, [, ], . or \.

Unquoted property names must be preceded by a dot unless the name is at the start of the path, in which case the dot must be omitted. Bracketed values must not be preceded by a dot.

If the path is an empty string, an empty array is returned.

get-wild/fp

get

  • Type: <T = any>(path: Path, $default?: any) => <U = T>(obj: any) => U
import { get } from 'get-wild/fp'

const followers = get('followers.*.name', [])

followers(user) // get(user, ["followers", "*", "name"], [])

const allFollowers = users.flatMap(followers)

A curried version of get which takes a path and an optional default value and returns a function which takes an object and returns the value(s) located at the path.

getter

  • Type: (options?: Options) => <T = any>(path: Path, $default?: any) => <U = T>(obj: any) => U
import { getter } from 'get-wild/fp'

const get = getter({ default: [], split: '.' })
const followers = get('followers.*.name')

followers(user) // get(user, ["followers", "*", "name"], [])

const allFollowers = users.flatMap(followers)

A variant of getter which takes an optional Options object and returns a curried version of get with the options baked in.

OPTIONS

collect

  • Type:
    • (value: {}) => Array<any>
    • (value: {}, index: number) => ArrayLike<any>
  • Default: Object.values
import { getter } from 'get-wild'

const collect = value => {
    return (value instanceof Map || value instanceof Set)
        ? Array.from(value.values())
        : Object.values(value)
}

const map = new Map([
    [1, { value: 'foo' }],
    [2, { value: 'bar' }],
    [3, { value: 'baz' }],
    [4, { value: 'quux' }],
])

const obj = { map }
const get = getter({ collect })

get(obj, 'map[0].value')  // "foo"
get(obj, 'map[-1].value') // "quux"
get(obj, 'map.*.value')   // ["foo", "bar", "baz", "quux"]

The collect function is used to convert a non-array value matched by a wildcard or indexed by an integer into an array of values. If not supplied, it defaults to Object.values, which works with plain objects, array-likes, and other non-nullish values. It can be overridden to add support for traversable values which aren't plain objects or arrays, e.g. DOM elements or ES6 Map and Set instances.

Note that the value passed to collect is not falsey and not an array, as both are handled without calling collect.

For indexed access, the collect function is passed the index (which may be negative) as its second argument and the return value can be an array-like rather than a full-blown array. For wildcard matches, the index is omitted and the return value must be an array. This distinction can be used to customize the result, e.g. to avoid constructing a large array if only a single value is accessed.

default

  • Type: any
  • Default: undefined
const get = getter({ default: [] })

get(data, 'users.*.hobbies')
// ["eating", "sleeping", "singing", "dancing"]

get(data, 'users.*.hobbies', [])
// ["eating", "sleeping", "singing", "dancing"]

get(data, 'users.*.hobbies', undefined)
// ["eating", "sleeping", undefined, "singing", "dancing"]

This option allows the default value to be baked into a get function. If no third argument is passed to the function, this value is returned for missing/undefined properties. Otherwise, the supplied value is returned.

flatMap

  • Type: PropertyKey | false
  • Default: "*"
import { getter } from 'get-wild'

const get = getter({ flatMap: '**', map: '*' })

get(data, 'users.**.hobbies', [])
// ["eating", "sleeping", "singing", "dancing"]

get(data, 'users.*.hobbies', [])
// [["eating", "sleeping"], [], ["singing", "dancing"]]

The token used to match values at the specified location and flatten the results.

If set to false, wildcard matching with flatMap is disabled and the token is treated as a regular property name.

Usage

Wildcard matching with flatMap behaves in a similar way to directory/filename matching with globs (minus the pattern matching). The selected properties (at the end of the path) are returned as direct children of the resulting array (wildcard matches always return an array), either as matched results or as default values if there's no match.

For example, with the default mapping, a path such as accounts.active.*.followers.*.name, which extracts the names of all followers of active accounts, would return an array of account names interspersed with default values where an account doesn't have any followers (or if a follower's name is undefined), e.g.:

get(data, 'accounts.active.*.followers.*.name')
// ["john", "paul", undefined, "george", undefined, "ringo"]

This can be reduced to just the names by setting the default value to an empty array, e.g.:

get(data, 'accounts.active.*.followers.*.name', [])
// ["john", "paul", "george", "ringo"]

Syntax

Note that with the default parser, the token must be a syntactically-valid name, e.g. this doesn't work:

import { getter } from 'get-wild'

const obj = { foo: [{ bar: 1 }, { bar: 2 }] }
const get = getter({ flatMap: '[]' })

get(obj, 'foo.[].bar') // SyntaxError: Invalid step @ 3: "foo.[].bar"

If a custom parser is supplied, any token can be used:

const get = getter({ flatMap: '[]', split: '.' })

get(obj, 'foo.[].bar') // [1, 2]

map

  • Type: PropertyKey | false
  • Default: "**"
import { getter } from 'get-wild'

const get = getter({ map: '*', flatMap: '**' })

get(data, 'users.*.hobbies', [])
// [["eating", "sleeping"], [], ["singing", "dancing"]]

get(data, 'users.**.hobbies', [])
// ["eating", "sleeping", "singing", "dancing"]

The token used to match values at the specified location without flattening the results.

Matching with map selects the same values as flatMap, but they remain nested inside arrays, with each enclosing map in the path adding another layer of wrapping.

If set to false, wildcard matching with map is disabled and the token is treated as a regular property name.

split

  • Type: string | Parser
  • Default: split
  • Alias: parser
import { getter } from  'get-wild'

const split = path => path.split('.')
const get = getter({ split })
const obj = { '': { '': 42 } }

get(obj, '.') // 42

A function which takes a path expression (string) and parses it into an array of property names (strings, symbols or numbers). If not supplied, a default parser which supports an extended version of JavaScript's native path syntax is used.

As a shortcut, if the value is a string, a function which splits the path on that string is used, i.e. the following are equivalent:

const split = path => path.split('.')
const get = getter({ split })
const get = getter({ split: '.' })

DEVELOPMENT

NPM Scripts

The following NPM scripts are available:

  • build - compile the library for testing and save to the target directory
  • build:doc - generate the README's TOC (table of contents)
  • build:release - compile the library for release and save to the target directory
  • clean - remove the target directory and its contents
  • rebuild - clean the target directory and recompile the library
  • repl - launch a node REPL with the library loaded
  • test - recompile the library and run the test suite
  • test:run - run the test suite
  • typecheck - sanity check the library's type definitions

COMPATIBILITY

SEE ALSO

VERSION

3.0.2

AUTHOR

chocolateboy

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright © 2020-2022 by chocolateboy.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the MIT license.