Atom Filter $f()
Simple function to create filter with simple JSON syntax.
How to use
var filtered = array.filter({ category: 'Action' });
You can also pass function that will be forwarded to default filter function of array.
To create filter function you can also use $f
var f = $f({ category: 'Action' });
var filtered = array.filter(f);
Examples
{ name: 'akash' }
equivalent of
function(item){
return item.name == 'akash';
}
Multiple conditions
{
category:'Action',
'price <': 200
}
equivalent of
function(item){
return
item.category == 'Action' &&
item.price < 200;
}
Perform or
{
category:'Action',
$or:{
'yearlyPrice <': 200,
'monthlyPrice <': 20
}
}
equivalent of
function(item){
return
item.category == 'Action' &&
(item.yearlyPrice < 200 ||
item.monthlyPrice < 20)
}
In operator
{ 'category in': ['Action','Comedy'] }
Not operator
{ 'category !in': ['Drama','Documentory'] }
Contains operator
For string values only, this does not raise error if any property chain is null. If any object in property chain returns null, function returns false.
{ 'broker.name contains': 'ash' }
equivalent of
function(item){
return ((broker || {}).name || '').indexOf('ash') !== -1;
}
Any operator
{ 'children any': { name: 'Akash' } }
equivalent of
function(item){
return item.children.filter(
function(c){
c.name == 'Akash'
} ) ? true : false;
}
or in short...
function (item){
return item.children.filter($f({ name: 'Akash' }$) ? true : false;
}
Regexp
{ 'first ~': /^A/ }
equivalent of
function (item){
return /^A/.test(item.name);
}
Multi Field Sorting
array.sort('Gender DESC,FirstName');
equivalent of
array.sort(function(a,b){
if(!a){
return !b ? 0 : -1;
}
if(!b){
return 1;
}
var ag = (a.Gender || '').toLowerCase();
var bg = (b.Gender || '').toLowerCase();
var n = bg.localeCompare(ag);
if(n!=0){
return n;
}
var af = (a.FirstName || '').toLowerCase();
var bf = (b.FirstName || '').toLowerCase();
return af.localeCompare(bf);
});
Sorting case insensitive, to perform case sensitive, you should use operator CSASC for case sensitive ascending and CSDESC for case sensitive descending sorting.
Null Safe
The method is null safe, it does not throw null exceptions.
Operators
ASC - Case insensitive ascending order (default)
DESC - Case insensitive descending order
CSASC - Case sensitive ascending order
CSDESC - Case sensitive descending order

Log in or sign up for Devpost to join the conversation.