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Convenient argument shifting because you know you need it

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Argle

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Argle is a very small argument shifting library for JavaScript which makes it easy to accept optional parameters before the end of your arguments list. It works great against things like destructuring in ES6, but is still usable from within ES5 versions of JavaScript.

Installation

Argle lives on npm, so just install it via the command line and you're good to go. All other dependencies will be pulled automatically.

$ npm install --save argle

Usage

The API is super simple, there's a single function shift/3:

argle.shift(argumentsArray, [ optionalDefaultValues | optionalOptionsObject ], detectionFunction);

// argumentsArray           - your args list to shift (an array or arguments object)
// optionalDefaultValues    - a values list to shift with rather than 'undefined', this is the same as { defaults: optionalDefaultValues }
// optionalOptionsObject    - an object containing options
    // count                - the amount of arguments you desire (only useful with ...args syntax)
    // defaults             - a values list to shift with rather than 'undefined'
    // match                - the number of matches to require (in a row) before shifting (defaults to 1)
// detectionFunction        - a function which should return true when you've found your right-most argument

Examples

// Define a function which always has a callback, but two optional arguments
function myFunction(optionalArgument1, optionalArgument2, callbackFunction) {

}

// Typically you're stuck shifting these arguments manually:
function myFunction(optionalArgument1, optionalArgument2, callbackFunction) {
  if (isFunction(optionalArgument1)) {
    callbackFunction = optionalArgument1;
    optionalArgument2 = undefined;
    optionalArgument1 = undefined;
  }
  else if (isFunction(optionalArgument2)) {
    callbackFunction = optionalArgument2;
    optionalArgument2 = undefined;
  }
}

// Even in ES6, you can't use default arguments to assist with this.
// Calling myFunction(function () { }) would give you [ function () { }, { } ] as arguments.
function myFunction(optionalArgument1 = {}, optionalArgument2 = {}, callbackFunction) {
  // optionalArgument1 == function () { }
  // optionalArgument2 == { }
  // callbackFunction  == undefined;
}

// Argle aims to make this a little less awful (it's still gross though)
// In ES5, calling with: myFunction(function () { }):
function myFunction(optionalArgument1, optionalArgument2, callbackFunction) {
  let args1 = argle.shift([ optionalArgument1, optionalArgument2, callbackFunction ], isFunction);
  let args2 = argle.shift([ optionalArgument1, optionalArgument2, callbackFunction ], [ 1, 2 ], isFunction);
  let args3 = argle.shift([ optionalArgument1, optionalArgument2, callbackFunction ], [ {} ], isFunction);
  let args4 = argle.shift(arguments, { count: 3 }, isFunction);

  // args1 == [ undefined, undefined, function () { })
  // args2 == [ 1, 2, function () { })
  // args3 == [ undefined, {}, function () { })
  // args4 == [ undefined, undefined, function () { })
}

// In ES6, calling with: myFunction(function () { }):
// Note that you should provide 'count' as an option to inform how many arguments you're wanting
function myFunction(...argList) {
  let optionalArgument1, optionalArgument2, callbackFunction, opts = {
    count: 3,
    defaults: [ {}, {} ]
  };

  [ optionalArgument1, optionalArgument2, callbackFunction ] = argle.shift(argList, opts, isFunction);
  // or [ optionalArgument1 = {}, optionalArgument2 = {}, callbackFunction ] = argle.shift(argList, { count: 3 }, isFunction);
}

// Match counts can be used to determine how many must match (in a row) before shifting:
// Here's an example of when you would use a custom match count:
function myFunction(optionalArgument1, optionalArgument2, callbackFunction1, callbackFunction2) {
  return argle.shift([ optionalArgument1, optionalArgument2, callbackFunction1, callbackFunction2 ], { match: 2 }, isFunction);

  // myFunction(function () { }, function () { }) == [ undefined, undefined, function () { }, function () { })
  // myFunction(1, function () { }, function () { }) == [ 1, undefined, function () { }, function () { })
  // myFunction(1, 2, function () { }, function () { }) == [ 1, 2, function () { }, function () { })
  // myFunction(1, function () { }, 2, function () { }) == [ 1, function () { }, 2, function () { })
}

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