1 | # jsprim: utilities for primitive JavaScript types
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2 |
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3 | This module provides miscellaneous facilities for working with strings,
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4 | numbers, dates, and objects and arrays of these basic types.
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5 |
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6 |
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7 | ### deepCopy(obj)
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8 |
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9 | Creates a deep copy of a primitive type, object, or array of primitive types.
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10 |
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11 |
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12 | ### deepEqual(obj1, obj2)
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13 |
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14 | Returns whether two objects are equal.
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15 |
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16 |
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17 | ### isEmpty(obj)
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18 |
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19 | Returns true if the given object has no properties and false otherwise. This
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20 | is O(1) (unlike `Object.keys(obj).length === 0`, which is O(N)).
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21 |
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22 | ### hasKey(obj, key)
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23 |
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24 | Returns true if the given object has an enumerable, non-inherited property
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25 | called `key`. [For information on enumerability and ownership of properties, see
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26 | the MDN
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27 | documentation.](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Enumerability_and_ownership_of_properties)
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28 |
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29 | ### forEachKey(obj, callback)
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30 |
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31 | Like Array.forEach, but iterates enumerable, owned properties of an object
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32 | rather than elements of an array. Equivalent to:
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33 |
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34 | for (var key in obj) {
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35 | if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(obj, key)) {
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36 | callback(key, obj[key]);
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37 | }
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38 | }
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39 |
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40 |
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41 | ### flattenObject(obj, depth)
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42 |
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43 | Flattens an object up to a given level of nesting, returning an array of arrays
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44 | of length "depth + 1", where the first "depth" elements correspond to flattened
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45 | columns and the last element contains the remaining object . For example:
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46 |
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47 | flattenObject({
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48 | 'I': {
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49 | 'A': {
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50 | 'i': {
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51 | 'datum1': [ 1, 2 ],
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52 | 'datum2': [ 3, 4 ]
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53 | },
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54 | 'ii': {
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55 | 'datum1': [ 3, 4 ]
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56 | }
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57 | },
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58 | 'B': {
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59 | 'i': {
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60 | 'datum1': [ 5, 6 ]
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61 | },
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62 | 'ii': {
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63 | 'datum1': [ 7, 8 ],
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64 | 'datum2': [ 3, 4 ],
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65 | },
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66 | 'iii': {
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67 | }
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68 | }
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69 | },
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70 | 'II': {
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71 | 'A': {
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72 | 'i': {
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73 | 'datum1': [ 1, 2 ],
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74 | 'datum2': [ 3, 4 ]
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75 | }
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76 | }
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77 | }
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78 | }, 3)
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79 |
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80 | becomes:
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81 |
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82 | [
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83 | [ 'I', 'A', 'i', { 'datum1': [ 1, 2 ], 'datum2': [ 3, 4 ] } ],
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84 | [ 'I', 'A', 'ii', { 'datum1': [ 3, 4 ] } ],
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85 | [ 'I', 'B', 'i', { 'datum1': [ 5, 6 ] } ],
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86 | [ 'I', 'B', 'ii', { 'datum1': [ 7, 8 ], 'datum2': [ 3, 4 ] } ],
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87 | [ 'I', 'B', 'iii', {} ],
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88 | [ 'II', 'A', 'i', { 'datum1': [ 1, 2 ], 'datum2': [ 3, 4 ] } ]
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89 | ]
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90 |
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91 | This function is strict: "depth" must be a non-negative integer and "obj" must
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92 | be a non-null object with at least "depth" levels of nesting under all keys.
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93 |
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94 |
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95 | ### flattenIter(obj, depth, func)
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96 |
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97 | This is similar to `flattenObject` except that instead of returning an array,
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98 | this function invokes `func(entry)` for each `entry` in the array that
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99 | `flattenObject` would return. `flattenIter(obj, depth, func)` is logically
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100 | equivalent to `flattenObject(obj, depth).forEach(func)`. Importantly, this
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101 | version never constructs the full array. Its memory usage is O(depth) rather
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102 | than O(n) (where `n` is the number of flattened elements).
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103 |
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104 | There's another difference between `flattenObject` and `flattenIter` that's
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105 | related to the special case where `depth === 0`. In this case, `flattenObject`
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106 | omits the array wrapping `obj` (which is regrettable).
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107 |
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108 |
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109 | ### pluck(obj, key)
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110 |
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111 | Fetch nested property "key" from object "obj", traversing objects as needed.
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112 | For example, `pluck(obj, "foo.bar.baz")` is roughly equivalent to
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113 | `obj.foo.bar.baz`, except that:
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114 |
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115 | 1. If traversal fails, the resulting value is undefined, and no error is
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116 | thrown. For example, `pluck({}, "foo.bar")` is just undefined.
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117 | 2. If "obj" has property "key" directly (without traversing), the
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118 | corresponding property is returned. For example,
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119 | `pluck({ 'foo.bar': 1 }, 'foo.bar')` is 1, not undefined. This is also
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120 | true recursively, so `pluck({ 'a': { 'foo.bar': 1 } }, 'a.foo.bar')` is
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121 | also 1, not undefined.
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122 |
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123 |
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124 | ### randElt(array)
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125 |
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126 | Returns an element from "array" selected uniformly at random. If "array" is
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127 | empty, throws an Error.
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128 |
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129 |
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130 | ### startsWith(str, prefix)
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131 |
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132 | Returns true if the given string starts with the given prefix and false
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133 | otherwise.
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134 |
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135 |
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136 | ### endsWith(str, suffix)
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137 |
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138 | Returns true if the given string ends with the given suffix and false
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139 | otherwise.
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140 |
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141 |
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142 | ### parseInteger(str, options)
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143 |
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144 | Parses the contents of `str` (a string) as an integer. On success, the integer
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145 | value is returned (as a number). On failure, an error is **returned** describing
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146 | why parsing failed.
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147 |
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148 | By default, leading and trailing whitespace characters are not allowed, nor are
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149 | trailing characters that are not part of the numeric representation. This
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150 | behaviour can be toggled by using the options below. The empty string (`''`) is
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151 | not considered valid input. If the return value cannot be precisely represented
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152 | as a number (i.e., is smaller than `Number.MIN_SAFE_INTEGER` or larger than
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153 | `Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER`), an error is returned. Additionally, the string
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154 | `'-0'` will be parsed as the integer `0`, instead of as the IEEE floating point
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155 | value `-0`.
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156 |
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157 | This function accepts both upper and lowercase characters for digits, similar to
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158 | `parseInt()`, `Number()`, and [strtol(3C)](https://illumos.org/man/3C/strtol).
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159 |
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160 | The following may be specified in `options`:
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161 |
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162 | Option | Type | Default | Meaning
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163 | ------------------ | ------- | ------- | ---------------------------
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164 | base | number | 10 | numeric base (radix) to use, in the range 2 to 36
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165 | allowSign | boolean | true | whether to interpret any leading `+` (positive) and `-` (negative) characters
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166 | allowImprecise | boolean | false | whether to accept values that may have lost precision (past `MAX_SAFE_INTEGER` or below `MIN_SAFE_INTEGER`)
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167 | allowPrefix | boolean | false | whether to interpret the prefixes `0b` (base 2), `0o` (base 8), `0t` (base 10), or `0x` (base 16)
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168 | allowTrailing | boolean | false | whether to ignore trailing characters
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169 | trimWhitespace | boolean | false | whether to trim any leading or trailing whitespace/line terminators
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170 | leadingZeroIsOctal | boolean | false | whether a leading zero indicates octal
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171 |
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172 | Note that if `base` is unspecified, and `allowPrefix` or `leadingZeroIsOctal`
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173 | are, then the leading characters can change the default base from 10. If `base`
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174 | is explicitly specified and `allowPrefix` is true, then the prefix will only be
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175 | accepted if it matches the specified base. `base` and `leadingZeroIsOctal`
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176 | cannot be used together.
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177 |
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178 | **Context:** It's tricky to parse integers with JavaScript's built-in facilities
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179 | for several reasons:
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180 |
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181 | - `parseInt()` and `Number()` by default allow the base to be specified in the
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182 | input string by a prefix (e.g., `0x` for hex).
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183 | - `parseInt()` allows trailing nonnumeric characters.
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184 | - `Number(str)` returns 0 when `str` is the empty string (`''`).
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185 | - Both functions return incorrect values when the input string represents a
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186 | valid integer outside the range of integers that can be represented precisely.
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187 | Specifically, `parseInt('9007199254740993')` returns 9007199254740992.
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188 | - Both functions always accept `-` and `+` signs before the digit.
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189 | - Some older JavaScript engines always interpret a leading 0 as indicating
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190 | octal, which can be surprising when parsing input from users who expect a
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191 | leading zero to be insignificant.
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192 |
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193 | While each of these may be desirable in some contexts, there are also times when
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194 | none of them are wanted. `parseInteger()` grants greater control over what
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195 | input's permissible.
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196 |
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197 | ### iso8601(date)
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198 |
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199 | Converts a Date object to an ISO8601 date string of the form
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200 | "YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS.sssZ". This format is not customizable.
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201 |
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202 |
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203 | ### parseDateTime(str)
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204 |
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205 | Parses a date expressed as a string, as either a number of milliseconds since
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206 | the epoch or any string format that Date accepts, giving preference to the
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207 | former where these two sets overlap (e.g., strings containing small numbers).
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208 |
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209 |
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210 | ### hrtimeDiff(timeA, timeB)
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211 |
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212 | Given two hrtime readings (as from Node's `process.hrtime()`), where timeA is
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213 | later than timeB, compute the difference and return that as an hrtime. It is
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214 | illegal to invoke this for a pair of times where timeB is newer than timeA.
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215 |
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216 | ### hrtimeAdd(timeA, timeB)
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217 |
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218 | Add two hrtime intervals (as from Node's `process.hrtime()`), returning a new
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219 | hrtime interval array. This function does not modify either input argument.
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220 |
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221 |
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222 | ### hrtimeAccum(timeA, timeB)
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223 |
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224 | Add two hrtime intervals (as from Node's `process.hrtime()`), storing the
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225 | result in `timeA`. This function overwrites (and returns) the first argument
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226 | passed in.
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227 |
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228 |
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229 | ### hrtimeNanosec(timeA), hrtimeMicrosec(timeA), hrtimeMillisec(timeA)
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230 |
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231 | This suite of functions converts a hrtime interval (as from Node's
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232 | `process.hrtime()`) into a scalar number of nanoseconds, microseconds or
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233 | milliseconds. Results are truncated, as with `Math.floor()`.
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234 |
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235 |
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236 | ### validateJsonObject(schema, object)
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237 |
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238 | Uses JSON validation (via JSV) to validate the given object against the given
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239 | schema. On success, returns null. On failure, *returns* (does not throw) a
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240 | useful Error object.
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241 |
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242 |
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243 | ### extraProperties(object, allowed)
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244 |
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245 | Check an object for unexpected properties. Accepts the object to check, and an
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246 | array of allowed property name strings. If extra properties are detected, an
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247 | array of extra property names is returned. If no properties other than those
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248 | in the allowed list are present on the object, the returned array will be of
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249 | zero length.
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250 |
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251 | ### mergeObjects(provided, overrides, defaults)
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252 |
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253 | Merge properties from objects "provided", "overrides", and "defaults". The
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254 | intended use case is for functions that accept named arguments in an "args"
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255 | object, but want to provide some default values and override other values. In
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256 | that case, "provided" is what the caller specified, "overrides" are what the
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257 | function wants to override, and "defaults" contains default values.
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258 |
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259 | The function starts with the values in "defaults", overrides them with the
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260 | values in "provided", and then overrides those with the values in "overrides".
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261 | For convenience, any of these objects may be falsey, in which case they will be
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262 | ignored. The input objects are never modified, but properties in the returned
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263 | object are not deep-copied.
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264 |
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265 | For example:
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266 |
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267 | mergeObjects(undefined, { 'objectMode': true }, { 'highWaterMark': 0 })
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268 |
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269 | returns:
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270 |
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271 | { 'objectMode': true, 'highWaterMark': 0 }
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272 |
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273 | For another example:
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274 |
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275 | mergeObjects(
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276 | { 'highWaterMark': 16, 'objectMode': 7 }, /* from caller */
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277 | { 'objectMode': true }, /* overrides */
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278 | { 'highWaterMark': 0 }); /* default */
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279 |
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280 | returns:
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281 |
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282 | { 'objectMode': true, 'highWaterMark': 16 }
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283 |
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284 |
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285 | # Contributing
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286 |
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287 | See separate [contribution guidelines](CONTRIBUTING.md).
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