Finally a clear, succinct and safe syntax to do Pattern Matching in modern JavaScript. (backstory)
The setup is pretty simple, simply require the library with match
and when
and you are ready to go!
const {match, when} = require('match-when');
or globally
require('match-when/register'); // `match` and `when` are now globally available
Now let's see how we would write a factorial function:
function fact(n){
return match({
[when(0)]: 1,
[when()]: (n) => n * fact(n-1)
})(n);
}
fact(10); // 3628800
Clear and simple right?
Alternatively, match(<input>, patternSpecification)
can be used to instantly perform a match:
function fact(n){
return match(n, {
[when(0)]: 1,
[when()]: (n) => n * fact(n-1)
});
}
fact(10); // 3628800
Note that when()
is a catch-all pattern and, if used, should always be the last condition. If you forget it match()
will throw a MissingCatchAllPattern
exception if nothing was matched.
npm i match-when -S
match
works well with high order functions like map
, filter
(and so on) too:
[2, 4, 1, 2].map(match({
[when(1)]: "one",
[when(2)]: "two",
[when()]: "many"
}));
// [ 'two', 'many', 'one', 'two' ]
It also works with arrays:
function length(list){
return match({
[when([])]: 0,
[when()]: ([head, ...tail]) => 1 + length(tail)
})(list);
}
length([1, 1, 1]); // 3
Sadly JavaScript does not offer us a way to overload operators so we're stuck with when.or
:
function parseArgument(arg){
return match({
[when.or("-h", "--help")]: () => displayHelp,
[when.or("-v", "--version")]: () => displayVersion,
[when()]: (whatever) => unknownArgument.bind(null, whatever)
})(arg);
}
parseArgument(process.argv.slice(1)); // displayHelp || displayVersion || (binded)unknownArgument
const protocols = repositories.map(match({
[when.and({useSSH:true}, {useSSH: true})]: 'git+ssh:',
[when.and({useSSH:true}, {useHTTP: true})]: 'git+http:',
[when.and({useSSH:true}, {useHTTPS: true})]: 'git+https:',
[when()]: 'unsupported:'
}))
match-when supports regular expressions as well:
['hey.com', 'fg@plop.com', 'fg+plop@plop.com', 'wat'].filter(match({
[when(/\S+@\S+\.\S+/)]: false, // **seems** to be a valid email (unsafe regex for doc purpose only)
[when()]: true // the email could be invalid, return it
}));
// ['hey.com', 'wat']
[12, 42, 99, 101].map(match({
[when.range(0, 41)]: '< answer',
[when.range(43, 100)]: '> answer',
[when(42)]: 'answer',
[when()]: '< 0, or > 100'
}));
// ['< answer', 'answer', '> answer', '< 0, or > 100']
{ x1: pattern1, ..., xn: patternn }
- matches any object with property namesx1
toxn
matching patternspattern1
topatternn
, respectively. Only the own properties of the pattern are used.[pattern0, ..., patternn]
- matches any object with property names 0 to n matching patternspattern0
topatternn
, respectively./pattern/flags
- matches any values than pass the regular expression testwhen.range(low, high)
matches any number value in the range [low, high],low
andhigh
included.when.or(pattern0, ..., patternn)
- matches if at least onepattern
matches.when.and(pattern0, ..., patternn)
- matches if everypattern
matches.
I will accept PR with their associated tests for the following features:
- define and implement some syntax to support wildcards
todo-list inspired by pattern-match from dherman.
* well, of course, they are not keywords but simple functions
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