Lotide
A mini clone of the Lodash library.
Purpose
BEWARE: This library was published for learning purposes. It is not intended for use in production-grade software.
This project was created and published by me as part of my learnings at Lighthouse Labs.
Usage
Install it:
npm install @username/lotide
Require it:
const _ = require('@neerav-dev/lotide');
Call it:
const results = _.tail([1, 2, 3]) // => [2, 3]
Documentation
The following functions are currently implemented:
-
head(...)
: function for arrays is to retrieve the first element from the array. -
tail(...)
: function for arrays is to retrieve every element except the head (first element) of the array. -
middle(...)
: function for arrays is to retrieve the middle-most element(s) of the given array.- For arrays with one or two elements, there is no middle so will return an empty array.
- For arrays with odd number of elements, an array containing a single middle element will be returned.
- For arrays with an even number of elements, an array containing the two elements in the middle will be returned.
-
flatten(...)
: function will take in an array containing elements including nested arrays of elements, and return a "flattened" version of the array. -
countOnly(...)
: function will be given an array and an object. It will return an object containing counts of everything that the input object listed. -
letterPositions(...)
: function will return all the indices (zero-based positions) in the string where each character is found. -
findKeyByValue(...)
: function takes in an object and a value. It will scan the object and return the first key which contains the given value. If no key with that given value is found, then it will return undefined -
eqObjects(...)
: function will take in two objects and returns true or false, based on a perfect match -
eqArrays(...)
: function will takes in two arrays and returns true or false, based on a perfect match. -
without(...)
: function will take an array and will return a subset of a given array, removing unwanted elements. -
countLetters(...)
:function will take in a sentence (as a string) and then return a count of each of the letters in that sentence. -
map(...)
: function take in two arguments, an array and a callback function will return a new array based on the results of the callback function. -
takeUntil(...)
:function will take in two arguments, an array and a callback function, and will return a "slice of the array with elements taken from the beginning." It should keep going until the callback/predicate returns a truthy value. -
findKey(...)
: function will takes in an object and a callback. It will scan the object and return the first key for which the callback returns a truthy value. If no key is found, then it should return undefined.