chainable-object

1.2.0 • Public • Published

Chainable Object

Build Status npm version

Create objects with chainable properties

Allows the creation of D3-style chainable objects.

Usage

Creating chainable objects

var chainable = require('chainable-object');
 
// create chainable object
var instance = chainable( {
    foo: {
        bar: {
            qux: 'a value for qux' //initial value for `foo().bar().qux()`
        },
        baz: 'a value for baz' //initial value for `foo().baz()`
    }
} );
 
// now use it
 
//retrieve a value
console.log(instance.foo().bar().qux()); //outputs: "a value for qux"
 
//set a value directly
instance.foo().bar().qux('other value'); //sets the value of `qux` to "other value"
console.log(instance.foo().bar().qux()); //outputs: "other value"
 
//set a nested value through the use of an object
instance.foo().bar({qux: 'yet another value'}); //sets the value of `qux` to "yet another value"
console.log(instance.foo().bar().qux()); //outputs: "yet another value"

Processing of values

If you need to process the value before it's set, you can provide a processor function:

// create chainable object
var instance = chainable( {
    foo: {
        bar: function processBar(value){
            return value.toUpperCase() + '!!!';
        }
    }
} );
 
instance.foo().bar('burn motherfucker, burn');
console.log(instance.foo().bar()); //outputs: "BURN MOTHERFUCKER, BURN !!!"

v1.2.0 and up

Processors receive the name of the property as a second argument:

var instance = chainable({
  foo: function(value, name){
    console.log('name:', name);
    return value;
  }
});
instance.foo('a value for foo'); //output: 'name: foo'

Combining processors and initial values

Just wrap 'm in an Array. The processor always goes first!

// create chainable object
var instance = chainable( {
    foo: {
        bar: [ 
            function processBar(value){
                return value.toUpperCase() + '!!!';
            }, 
            "initial value"
        ]
    }
} );
 
console.log(instance.foo().bar()); //outputs: "initial value"
instance.foo().bar('burn motherfucker, burn');
console.log(instance.foo().bar()); //outputs: "BURN MOTHERFUCKER, BURN !!!"

CAVEAT: if you want to set a function or an object as an initial value, you HAVE TO use the Array syntax:

// create chainable object
var instance = chainable( {
    foo: {
        bar: [
            'value',  // tells `chainable-object` no processing is necessary, `falsy` values will have the same effect
            function(){ // initial value of `foo().bar()`
                return 10;
            }
        ]
    }
} );
 
console.log(instance.foo().bar()); //outputs: "[Function]"
console.log(instance.foo().bar()()); //outputs: "10"

Existing objects and prototypes

You can mix chainable properties into an already existing object:

var instance = {
    output: function(){
        console.log('Heads will roll!');
    }
}
 
// mixin
chainable( instance, {
    foo: {
        bar: 'bar'
    }
} );
 
console.log(instance.foo().bar()); //outputs: "bar"
console.log(instance.output()); //outputs: "Heads will roll!"

The same applies to prototypes:

function AwesomeClass(){
}
 
// mixin
chainable( AwesomeClass.prototype, {
    foo: {
        bar: 'Too drunk to fuck'
    }
} );
 
var instance = new AwesomeClass();
console.log(instance.foo().bar()); //outputs: "Too drunk to fuck"

Setting multiple root values at once

v1.1.0 and up

Nested objects can be updated by passing a vanilla object to the setters:

instance = chainable({
    foo:{
        bar: 'a value for bar'
    },
    qux: 'a value for qux',
    baz: 'a value for baz'
});
 
//set a nested value through the use of an object
instance.foo({bar: 'yet another value'}); //sets the value of `bar` to "yet another value"
console.log(instance.foo().bar()); //outputs: "yet another value"

However, what if you'd want to set the value of foo and the other root properties qux and baz? chainable-object adds a values accessor especially for this purpose:

instance.values({
    foo: {
        bar: 'a'
    },
    qux: 'b',
    baz: 'c'
});
console.log(instance.qux()); //outputs: 'b'

You can use it to retrieve a vanilla object with all the values too (aliased to toObject, since that's what it really does):

console.log(instance.values());
//outputs:
{
    foo: {
        bar: 'a'
    },
    qux: 'b',
    baz: 'c'
}

get and set

v1.2.0 and up

Another way to access the properties (with a bit more leeway) is to use get and set:

var instance = chainable(); 
instance.set('foo', 900); // creates a 'foo' method
console.log(instance.foo()); // output: 900
console.log(instance.get('foo')); // output: 900

get allows you to pass default values, in case the property has not been set yet:

var instance = chainable(); 
var value = instance.get('foo', 'a default value for foo');
console.log(value); // outputs: 'a default value for foo'

get will not create a property, i.e. this will throw:

var instance = chainable();
instance.get('foo', 'a default value for foo');
instance.foo(); // throws: TypeError: instance.foo is not a function

Installation and other shizzle

Use bower or npm to install chainable-object. You can use it on the front- and backend, but for clientside you'll need webpack or browserify to get it going. We'll have none of that global variable shizzle.

Dependencies: lodash

If you don't want to pull in lodash entirely or you prefer underscore you can configure webpack to swap lodash with Your Preference (TM).

//file: webpack.config.js or some such
resolve: {
    alias: {
        "lodash": "underscore/underscore.min"
    }
}

ATM chainable-object uses the following lodash functions: isObject, isArray, isFunction and each, i.e. just replace "underscore/underscore.min" in the above example with the location of your file where you provide those functions.

License

MIT

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Version

1.2.0

License

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