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nextbigsoundinc/dash

最新稳定版本:v4.0.1

Composer 安装命令:

composer require nextbigsoundinc/dash

包简介

A functional programming library for PHP. Inspired by Underscore, Lodash, and Ramda.

README 文档

README

A functional programming library for PHP. Inspired by Underscore, Lodash, and Ramda.

$avgMaleAge = Dash\chain([
	['name' => 'John', 'age' => 12, 'gender' => 'male'],
	['name' => 'Jane', 'age' => 34, 'gender' => 'female'],
	['name' => 'Pete', 'age' => 23, 'gender' => 'male'],
	['name' => 'Mark', 'age' => 11, 'gender' => 'male'],
	['name' => 'Mary', 'age' => 42, 'gender' => 'female'],
])
->filter(['gender', 'male'])
->map('age')
->average()
->value();

echo "Average male age is $avgMaleAge.";

Jump to:

Operations

View full list of operations here

Highlights

Why use Dash?

PHP's built-in array_* functions are limited, difficult to compose, inconsistent, and don't work across many data types.

For instance, let's say we want to find the average age of males in this list:

$people = [
	['name' => 'John', 'age' => 12, 'gender' => 'male'],
	['name' => 'Jane', 'age' => 34, 'gender' => 'female'],
	['name' => 'Pete', 'age' => 23, 'gender' => 'male'],
	['name' => 'Mark', 'age' => 11, 'gender' => 'male'],
	['name' => 'Mary', 'age' => 42, 'gender' => 'female'],
];

Using PHP's built-in in functions, we might write something like this:

$males = array_filter($people, function ($person) {
	return $person['gender'] === 'male';
});
$avgMaleAge = array_sum(array_column($males, 'age')) / count($males);

Dash makes common data transformation operations simpler:

$avgMaleAge = Dash\chain($people)
	->filter(['gender', 'male'])
	->map('age')
	->average()
	->value();

This is just a tiny subset of what Dash can do. See the full list of operations here.

Installation

Requires PHP 7.4+

composer require mpetrovich/dash

Usage

Dash operations are pure functions that can be used alone or chained together.

Standalone

Operations can be called as namespaced functions:

Dash\map([1, 2, 3], function ($n) { return $n * 2; });  // === [2, 4, 6]

or as static methods:

use Dash\Dash;

Dash::map([1, 2, 3], function ($n) { return $n * 2; });  // === [2, 4, 6]

Dash\_ can also be used as an alias for Dash\Dash:

use Dash\_;

_::map([1, 2, 3], function ($n) { return $n * 2; });  // === [2, 4, 6]

Chaining

Multiple operations can be chained in sequence using chain(). Call value() to return the final value.

$result = Dash\chain([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
	->filter('Dash\isOdd')
	->map(function ($n) { return $n * 2; })
	->value();

// $result === [2, 6, 10]

To explicitly convert the value to an array or stdClass, use arrayValue() or objectValue() respectively:

$result = Dash\chain(['a' => 1, 'b' => 2, 'c' => 3])
	->filter('Dash\isOdd')
	->mapValues(function ($n) { return $n * 2; })
	->objectValue();

// $result === (object) ['a' => 2, 'c' => 6]

For convenience, Dash\chain() can be aliased to a global function using addGlobalAlias(). It only needs to be called once during your application bootstrap:

// In your application bootstrap:
Dash::addGlobalAlias('__');

// Elsewhere:
$result = __([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
	->filter('Dash\isOdd')
	->map(function ($n) { return $n * 2; })
	->value();

Sometimes you don't need the return value of the chain. However, the chain isn't processed until value() is called. For semantic convenience, run() is also an alias for value():

$chain = Dash\chain(range(1, 5))
	->reverse()
	->each(function ($n) {
		echo "T-minus $n...\n";
		sleep(1);
	});

// Nothing echoed yet

$chain->value();
// or
$chain->run();

// Echoes each of the following lines 1 second apart:
// T-minus 5...
// T-minus 4...
// T-minus 3...
// T-minus 2...
// T-minus 1...

Supported data types

Dash can work with a wide variety of data types, including:

Examples

With an array:

Dash\chain([1, 2, 3, 4])
	->filter('Dash\isEven')
	->map(function ($value) {
		return $value * 2;
	})
	->value();
// === [4, 8]

With an object:

Dash\chain((object) ['a' => 1, 'b' => 2, 'c' => 3, 'd' => 4])
	->filter('Dash\isOdd')
	->keys()
	->join(', ')
	->value();
// === 'a, c'

With a Traversable:

Dash\chain(new ArrayObject(['a' => 1, 'b' => 2, 'c' => 3, 'd' => 4]))
	->pick(['b', 'c'])
	->values()
	->sum()
	->value();
// === 5

With a DirectoryIterator:

$iterator = new FilesystemIterator(__DIR__, FilesystemIterator::SKIP_DOTS);

$filenames = Dash\chain($iterator)
	->reject(function ($fileinfo) {
		return $fileinfo->isDir();
	})
	->map(function ($fileinfo) {
		return pathinfo($fileinfo)['filename'];
	})
	->value();

Currying

curry() and related operations can be used to create curried functions from any callable:

function listThree($a, $b, $c) {
	return "$a, $b, and $c";
}

$listThree = Dash\curry('listThree');
$listTwo = $listThree('first');
$listTwo('second', 'third');  // === 'first, second, and third'

Most Dash functions have a curried version that accepts input data as the last parameter instead of as the first. Curried versions are located in the Dash\Curry namespace:

Dash\chain([
	'a' => 3,
	'b' => '3',
	'c' => 3,
	'd' => 3.0
])
->filter(Dash\Curry\identical(3))
->value();
// === ['a' => 3, 'c' => 3]

Similarly, partial() and related operations can be used to create partially-applied functions:

$greet = function ($greeting, $name) {
	return "$greeting, $name!";
};

$sayHello = Dash\partial($greet, 'Hello');
$sayHowdy = Dash\partial($greet, 'Howdy');

$sayHello('Mark');  // === 'Hello, Mark!'
$sayHowdy('Jane');  // === 'Howdy, Jane!'

Lazy evaluation

Chained operations are not evaluated until value() or run() is called. Furthermore, the input data can be changed and evaluated multiple times using with(). This makes it simple to create reusable chains:

$chain = Dash\chain()
	->filter('Dash\isOdd')
	->map(function ($n) { return $n * 2; });

$chain->with([1, 2, 3])->value();  // === [2, 6]
$chain->with([4, 5, 6, 7])->value();  // === [10, 14]

Chains can also be cloned and extended:

// …continued from above
$clone = clone $chain;
$clone->map(function ($n) { $n + 1; })
$clone->value();  // === [11, 15]

// The original chain is untouched
$chain->value();  // === [10, 14]

When value() is called, the result is cached until the chain is modified or the input is changed using with().

Custom operations

Custom operations can be added, retrieved, and removed using setCustom(), getCustom(), and unsetCustom(), respectively. Dash\custom() is also an alias for Dash::getCustom():

Dash::setCustom('triple', function ($n) { return $n * 3; });

// Standalone
Dash::triple(4);  // === 12

// Chained
Dash\chain([1, 2, 3])
	->sum()
	->triple()
	->value();  // === 18

// As an argument
Dash\chain([1, 2, 3])
	->map('Dash\Dash::triple')
	->value();  // === [3, 6, 9]

// As an argument using the Dash::getCustom() method
Dash\chain([1, 2, 3])
	->map(Dash::getCustom('triple'))
	->value();  // === [3, 6, 9]

// Using the Dash\custom() operation
Dash\chain([1, 2, 3])
	->map(Dash\custom('triple'))
	->value();  // === [3, 6, 9]

Dash::unsetCustom('triple');

When chained, the current input is passed as the first parameter to the custom operation:

Dash::setCustom('divide', function($numerator, $denominator) { return $numerator / $denominator; });

Dash\chain(6)->divide(2)->value();  // === 2

Tips

If you find that Dash doesn't have an operation that you need, fear not. Custom logic can be added without giving up Dash chaining or other features. The simplest way to integrate missing operations is via the Dash\thru() operation, which allows custom logic to modify and seamlessly pass through its results to the next step in the chain.

For example, suppose we want to use array_change_key_case() and keep the usual Dash chaining semantics. With thru(), it's simple:

$result = Dash\chain(['one' => 1, 'two' => 2, 'three' => 3])
	->filter('Dash\isOdd')
	->thru(function($input) {
		return array_change_key_case($input, CASE_UPPER);
	})
	->keys()
	->value();

// $result === ['ONE', 'THREE']

Alternatively, if you find yourself needing to use array_change_key_case() often, it may be better to add a new custom operation:

Dash::setCustom('keyCase', function ($input, $case) {
	return array_change_key_case($input, $case);
});

which you can then use like any other chainable Dash method:

$result = Dash\chain(['one' => 1, 'two' => 2, 'three' => 3])
	->filter('Dash\isOdd')
	->keyCase(CASE_UPPER)
	->keys()
	->value();

// $result === ['ONE', 'THREE']

Feedback

Found a bug or have a suggestion? Please create a new GitHub issue. We want your feedback!

nextbigsoundinc/dash 适用场景与选型建议

nextbigsoundinc/dash 是一款 基于 PHP 开发的 Composer 扩展包,目前已累计 14.94k 次下载、GitHub Stars 达 89, 最近一次更新时间为 2017 年 10 月 06 日, 在 PHP 生态内属于活跃度较高的组件。

它主要适用于以下技术方向: 「php」 「underscore」 「functional」 「lodash」 「bottomline」 「functional programming」 等业务场景。在实际项目中,围绕这些方向常见需要落地的问题包括:接口对接、性能调优、并发安全、与既有框架(Laravel / ThinkPHP / Yii / Webman 等)的兼容适配,以及生产环境的日志埋点与稳定性保障。

我们在过去多个企业项目中使用过 nextbigsoundinc/dash 或与其功能相近的方案,如果你在选型或落地过程中遇到问题,例如 版本兼容、二次改造、私有化封装、与内部系统对接、生产 BUG 排查,欢迎联系我们协助评估。

围绕 nextbigsoundinc/dash 我们能提供哪些服务?
定制开发 / 二次开发

基于 nextbigsoundinc/dash 在你已有业务上做功能扩展、字段裁剪、UI 适配、与内部账号 / 权限 / 日志系统的深度对接。

BUG 修复 & 性能优化

线上偶发问题、内存泄漏、慢查询、并发异常等排查修复;针对高流量场景做缓存、队列、索引层面的调优。

项目外包 & 长期维护

承接完整的项目从需求 → 设计 → 开发 → 上线 → 长期运维;也可按月提供技术保姆服务。

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统计信息

  • 总下载量: 14.94k
  • 月度下载量: 0
  • 日度下载量: 0
  • 收藏数: 90
  • 点击次数: 23
  • 依赖项目数: 0
  • 推荐数: 0

GitHub 信息

  • Stars: 89
  • Watchers: 10
  • Forks: 7
  • 开发语言: PHP

其他信息

  • 授权协议: MIT
  • 更新时间: 2017-10-06