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SMHelper

SMHelper

Dependency Status devDependency Status

Collection of JavaScript utilities

This module is written in TypeScript and transpiled to JavaScript. All typings are available alongside the code.

This code is licensed under the terms of the MIT license (see LICENSE.md).

Full documentation

Full documentation is available on GitHub pages.

Add to your project

Install from NPM:

npm install --save smhelper

API Guide

Include the module with:

const SMHelper = require('smhelper')

The module exports the following methods:

SMHelper.buildQuerystring

let obj = {
    search: 'hello world',
    page: 2,
    marked: ['b', 'z']
}
let qs = SMHelper.buildQuerystring(obj)
// Result: search=hello%20world&page=2&marked=b%2Cz

This methods takes a dictionary (a set of key-value pairs) and returns a string that can be used as query string when building a URL. This method can be used together with SMHelper.buildUrl.

Characters are escaped using the proper HTTP sequence when necessary (spaces are replaced with %20). This method is Unicode-safe, and supports arrays .

SMHelper.buildUrl

let base = 'https://example.com/'
// You can also pass this as a string: 'api/v2/list'
let parts = ['api', 'v2', 'list']
let args = {
    search: 'hello world',
    page: 2
}
let url = SMHelper.buildUrl(base, parts, args)
// Result: 
// https://example.com/api/v2/list?search=hello%20world&page=2

This method builds a full URL starting from components above:

  • base is the protocol and hostname, including http(s)://
  • parts is the path, which can either be a string or an array
  • args is the dictionary for the query string (passed to SMHelper.buildQuerystring)

Returns a full URL, escaping values when necessary.

SMHelper.cloneObject

let obj = {
    a: [1, 2, 3],
    b: {
        x: 1,
        y: 'hello world'
    }
}
let clone = SMHelper.cloneObject(obj)

This method clones deeply any JavaScript object (scalar or non-scalar) that can be encoded as JSON. Since the object is cloned deeply, there is no reference to values in the original object.

SMHelper.compactObject

let obj = { a: 'b', b: false, c: null }
let onlyNull, result

onlyNull = false
result = SMHelper.compactObject(obj, onlyNull)
// Result: {a: 'b'}

onlyNull = true
result = SMHelper.compactObject(obj, onlyNull)
// Result: {a: 'b', b: false}

Removes from a dictionary (deeply) all values that are false-y. When onlyNull is true (default: false), only values that are exactly null are removed.

SMHelper.getDescendantProperty

let obj = {
    a: 1,
    b: {
        x1: 10,
        x2: {
            y1: 'Hello world',
            y2: [100, 200, 300]
        }
    }
}
let desc, result

desc = 'b.x2.y1'
result = SMHelper.getDescendantProperty(obj, desc)
// Result: Hello world

desc = 'b.x2.y2.2'
result = SMHelper.getDescendantProperty(obj, desc)
// Result: 300

Returns a nested property from a dictionary or array, referenced by a string in "dot notation" (for example: key1.key2.0).

SMHelper.isNumeric

let obj, result

obj = 100
result = SMHelper.isNumeric(obj)
// true

obj = "-100.4e2"
result = SMHelper.isNumeric(obj)
// true

obj = "hello world"
result = SMHelper.isNumeric(obj)
// false

Returns true if the passed value (string, number or any other object) is numeric: that is, if it can be safely converted to a float with parseFloat.

SMHelper.isPlainObject

let obj, result

obj = {a: 100}
result = SMHelper.isPlainObject(obj)
// true

obj = new Date()
result = SMHelper.isPlainObject(obj)
// false

obj = {a: new Date()}
result = SMHelper.isPlainObject(obj)
// true

Returns true if the passed parameter is a plain JavaScript "Object". This method checks only the passed object, and not its properties.

SMHelper.isScalar

let obj, result

obj = 100
result = SMHelper.isScalar(obj)
// true

obj = "hello world"
result = SMHelper.isScalar(obj)
// true

obj = {a: 100}
result = SMHelper.isScalar(obj)
// false

obj = new String('Hello world')
result = SMHelper.isScalar(obj)
// false

Returns true if the passed value is of a scalar type: string, number or boolean.

SMHelper.objectToDotNotation

let obj = {
    status: "success",
    auth: {
        code: 23123213,
        name: "John Black",
        keys: [10, 11]
    }
}
let preserveArrays, result

preserveArrays = false
result = SMHelper.objectToDotNotation(obj, preserveArrays)
/*
{
    "status": "success",
    "auth.code": 23123213,
    "auth.name": "John Black",
    "auth.keys.0": 10,
    "auth.keys.1": 11
}
*/

preserveArrays = true
result = SMHelper.objectToDotNotation(obj, preserveArrays)
/*
{
    "status": "success",
    "auth.code": 23123213,
    "auth.name": "John Black",
    "auth.keys": [10, 11]
}
*/

Flatten a dictionary to the "dot notation", as used by MongoDB (see example code). If preserveArrays is true (default: false), arrays are not transformed to the "dot notation".

SMHelper.pregQuote

let str = "*RRRING* Hello?"
let result = SMHelper.pregQuote(str)
// Result: \\*RRRING\\* Hello\\?

Takes a string and puts a backslash in front of every character that is part of the regular expression syntax. The resulting string can then be safely used as argument for new RegExp().

This is a port of the PHP preg_quote() function, and accepts the same arguments.

SMHelper.strIs

let pattern = 'foo*'
let value = 'foobar'
let result = SMHelper.strIs(pattern, value)
// true

Determines if a given string matches a pattern, allowing * as wildcard.

SMHelper.stringToCamel

let str, result

str = 'hello-world-a-1'
result = SMHelper.stringToCamel(str)
// Result: helloWorldA1

str = 'hello_world_a_1'
result = SMHelper.stringToCamel(str)
// Result: helloWorldA1

Converts strings with dashes or underscores (eg. 'foo-bar' or 'foo_bar') to camelCase ('fooBar').

SMHelper.stripTags

let input = '<p>Hello <img src="image.gif" onmouseover="some()"><i>World</i></p>'
let allowed = '<i>'
let result = SMHelper.stripTags(input, allowed)
// Result: Hello <i>World</i>

Strips all non-allowed HTML tags from a string. By default, no HTML tag is allowed.

This is a port of the PHP strip_tags() function, and accepts the same arguments.

SMHelper.toStringSafe

let val, result

val = 0
result = SMHelper.toStringSafe(val)
// Result: "0" (as string)

val = false
result = SMHelper.toStringSafe(val)
// Result: "false" (as string)

Converts any value to string, ensuring that the number 0 and the boolean false are treated correctly.

SMHelper.updatePropertyInObject

let obj = {
    hello: 'aa',
    test: {
        a: 'b',
        c: 0,
        d: {
            x: 1
        }
    }
}
let property = 'test.d.x'
let value = [0, 1, 2]
SMHelper.updatePropertyInObject(obj, property, value)
console.log(obj.test.d.x)
// Output: [ 0, 1, 2 ]

Updates a property (represented in the "dot notation") in an object, modifying the original object. If the property doesn't exist in the object, it's created.

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