Dead simple library for functional and reactive programming in JavaScript
F.js is a collection of helper methods used for functional and reactive programming
in JavaScript. It provides methods for transforming, filtering, reducing and
other operations which work on arrays, HTMLCollections, ES6
generators (and almost all other indexables) and streams of events.
With bower
bower install f.js --save-dev
And include the main script file into your project:
<script src="bower_components/f.js/dist/F.min.js"></script>
With NPM
npm install f-js --save-dev
And require the f-js
module into your files:
var Fjs = require("f-js"),
F = Fjs.F,
P = Fjs.P;
Manually downloading the zip file
curl "https://codeload.github.com/colin-dumitru/F.js/zip/0.5.0" > F.js.zip
unzip F.js.zip
And include the main script file into your project:
<script src="F.js-0.5.0/dist/F.min.js"></script>
F.js works with regular Arrays (RUN)
var people = [
{ name: "John", age: 31},
{ name: "Colin", age: 25},
{ name: "Dave", age: 13},
{ name: "Vic", age: 52}
];
var result = F(people)
.filter(function(person) {
return person.age < 50;
})
.property("name")
.drop(1)
.zip(["first", "second"])
.toArray();
document.write(JSON.stringify(result));
HTML collections (RUN)
var links = document.getElementsByTagName("a"),
titles = document.getElementsByTagName("h5");
var result = F(links)
.property("href")
.dropWhile(function(val) {
return val.indexOf("http") == -1;
})
.zip(
F(titles)
.property("innerText")
)
.toMap();
document.write(JSON.stringify(result));
And even ES6 generators (RUN)
function *gen() {
for (var i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
yield i;
}
}
var result = F(gen())
.fold((l, r) => l + r);
document.write(result);
So at it’s core, F.js is just another functional library. But the real power comes when you combine reactive programming with streams.
Streams are nothing more than promises which can resolve multiple times. You can either push or consume values from a stream, all done asynchronously. This enables you to write more modular async code, by passing values through streams and not callbacks.
This next example takes a search query from an input element and displays a list of images which match the given query, all done using streams.
Stream example (RUN)
var input = $("#search_query"),
keyStream = F.eventStream(input, "keydown"),
wordStream = F.stream(),
imageStream = F.stream();
F(keyStream)
.property("keyCode")
.accumulateUntil(P.equalTo(13)) /* Enter */
.map(function() {
return input.val();
})
.feedStream(wordStream)
.pullStream();
F(wordStream)
.each(text =>
$.ajax({
url: url + text,
dataType: 'jsonp',
jsonp: 'jsonFlickrApi',
jsonpCallback: 'jsonFlickrApi'
})
.then(imageStream.bindPush()))
.pullStream();
F(imageStream)
.each(reset)
.property("photos", "photo")
.each(images =>
F(images)
.map(render)
.foreach(display))
.pullStream();
Got you interested? Visit our wiki pages for more examples and info.