CLI Fuzzy Search
- Asynchronous data source
- Based on
draftlog
for dynamic output - Fuzzy-matching
Usage: as a module
Install as usually with npm install --save cli-fuzzy-search
or yarn add cli-fuzzy-search
.
Most basic usage is with a fully loaded data-source and default options:
const search = const options = data: myDataset
Options
stdin: processstdin // User input stream, must be a tty.ReadStream size: 10 // Number of shown results debounceDelay: 300 // Delay between last keystroke and actually filtering results data: promisedDataset // Promise([ { label, … } ]) // or search: searchFunction // (q: String, page: Number) => Promise({ more: Boolean, total: Number, data: Array }) fuzzyOnSearch: false // Apply fuzzy filter on dataset returned by search(), if your search results really suck cache: true // Cache previous search results in memory
You must provide data
or search
:
data
: the whole (or promise of) dataset, an array of objects with following properties:label
: the string showed in list- any other property will be kept as-is
search
: a function for asynchronous paginated search results:- this function will be called each time user changes input
- it will be called with two parameters:
- the string typed by user
- the requested page (starting at 1)
- this function is expected to return a promise of an object with following properties:
more
: if true it means there are more pages, so when user reaches the end of the list the function will be called again with incremented page number to fetch the rest (untilhasMore
is falsy)total
: total number of resultsdata
: the dataset, see above
The eventually returned item is a copy of dataset's item. If fuzzy filter was applied, additional properties will be added:
highlight
: fuzzy-matching highlighted charactersindex
: position (starting at 0) in the filtered list
See sample usages in samples folder.
Usage: command-line
It's mainly for demo purpose but I guess you could find some use.
Install with npm install -g cli-fuzzy-search
(or yarn global add cli-fuzzy-search
).
search-json <path to file> [nb shown results]
Your JSON file must be an array of objects, each one with at least a label
key, see sample file in this repository.