- IIEnumerable<T>
Remarks
This interface is like a rudimentary read-only IList<T>.
It's a convertible type that can be used in the following alternative ways in parameter lists, parameter objects or setters when annotated as such:
It is possible to specify an Array or to use the native 'iterable' protocol , iterators, or generators to populate the IListEnumerable<T> instance:
// Array
object.property = [item1, item2]
// Iterables
object.property = new Set([item1, item2])
object.property = new Map([
[key1, item1],
[key2, item2],
]).entries()
// Generators
function* generator(i: number) {
yield i
yield i + 10
}
// via the iterator protocol (with invocation)
object.property = generator(10)
// via the generator function (will be executed immediately to populate the collection)
object.property = function* generateValues() {
yield 1
yield 2
}Note that when using native iterables, in contrast to IEnumerable<T> created with from which will reevaluate upon re-enumeration, the list-enumerable will be populated only once, when when created with from, and thus the generator will only be executed once.
Type Parameters
T
- The type of the contained elements.
Members
Properties
Methods
Creates a wrapped enumerable that has one or several elements appended to it.
items any special if they are array-like or enumerable-like.Parameters
- items: T
- The item(s) to prepend to the enumeration
Return Value
- IEnumerable<T>
- A new live view over the original enumerable that has each of the
itemsappended to it.
Examples
const list = List.fromArray([1, 2, 3, 4])
const appendedEnumerable = list.append(5, 6)
console.log(appendedEnumerable.toArray()) // yields [1,2,3,4,5,6]
// show live updates
list.add(4.5)
console.log(appendedEnumerable.toArray()) // yields [1,2,3,4,4.5,5,6]See Also
Defined in
IEnumerable.appendArray.prototype.at function, with the important difference, that null will be returned instead of undefined in the case of an invalid index.Parameters
- index: number
- The index of the element to return. Supports relative indexing from the end of the enumerable when passed a negative index. In other words, if a negative number is used, the returned element will be found by counting back from the end of the enumerable.
Return Value
- T
- The element at the given
index, ornullif the index is not within the valid range of this enumerable.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 4])
console.log(enumerable.at(0)) // yields 1
console.log(enumerable.at(-1)) // yields 4
console.log(enumerable.at(5)) // yields null!
// using ?? for default values
console.log(enumerable.at(10) ?? 0) // yields 0
// use ! when you know that this is valid
console.log(enumerable.at(0)!.toFixed())
// use optional chaining when you are unsure whether the index is valid
console.log(enumerable.at(20)?.toFixed())
// combine optional chaining and null-coalescing operator when you are unsure
console.log(enumerable.at(30)?.toLocaleString() ?? 'no value')Defined in
IEnumerable.atConcatenates this enumerable with the given other elements in a new dynamic IEnumerable<T>.
elements in a new dynamic IEnumerable<T>.Parameters
- elements: any
- Rest arguments to be appended. In case the elements are enumerable-like, too, they will be will be enumerated after the others have been enumerated. But this can also be simple objects of type
Tin which case they will be appended to the enumerable just like with append
Return Value
- IEnumerable<T>
- A dynamic composite enumerable.
Examples
const enumerable1 = IEnumerable.from([1, 2])
const enumerable2 = IEnumerable.from([3, 4])
console.log(enumerable1.concat(enumerable2).toArray()) // yields [1,2,3,4]
// single values can be used, too
console.log(enumerable1.concat(3, 4).toArray()) // yields [1,2,3,4]
// arrays are flattened
console.log(enumerable1.concat([5, 6], [7, 8]).toArray()) // now contains [1,2,5,6,7,8]
// works with arrays and array-like collections, too
console.log(enumerable1.concat([3, 4]).toArray()) // yields [1,2,3,4]const list1 = List.fromArray([1, 2])
const list2 = List.fromArray([3, 4])
const result = list1.concat(list2)
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields [1,2,3,4]
list1.add(2.5)
// result changed also
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields [1,2,2.5,3,4]
list2.add(5)
// result changed also
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields [1,2,2.5,3,4,5]See Also
API
- append
Defined in
IEnumerable.concatCreates a wrapped enumerable that yields each element only once.
equals and hashCode methods are used if present.Parameters
- keySelector?: function(T): any
- The optional function that determines the key to determine distinctness of the elements. If omitted, the element itself is used.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<T>
- A new live view over the original enumerable that yields each element with a given key at most once.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 3, 4])
const result = enumerable.distinct()
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields [1,2,3,4]See Also
API
- HashMap
Defined in
IEnumerable.distinctCreates a wrapped view of an enumerable which drops the given amount of elements.
Parameters
- amount: number
- The number of elements to drop from the beginning. If negative, the elements will be skipped from the end of the enumeration.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<T>
- A new live view over the original enumerable that drops
amountelements.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7])
const result = enumerable.drop(3)
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields [4,5,6,7]See Also
API
- dropWhile
Defined in
IEnumerable.dropCreates a wrapped view of an enumerable which skips a number of elements at the beginning while the given predicate yields true.
true.predicate yields true for the elements of the original enumerable, the elements are skipped. The new enumeration will start with the first element for which the predicate yields false. All subsequent elements will be yielded.Parameters
- predicate: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean
- The predicate function that determines what elements should be skipped. While the predicate yields
truefor the provided item, the element will not be yielded.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<T>
- A new live view over the original enumerable that discards elements at the beginnging of the original enumeration while the predicate yields
true.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([
'a',
'b',
'c',
'd',
'a',
'b',
'c',
'd',
])
const result = enumerable.dropWhile(
(element) => element.charCodeAt(0) < 'c'.charCodeAt(0),
)
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields ["c", "d", "a", "b", "c", "d"]See Also
Defined in
IEnumerable.dropWhileDetermines whether every element of the enumerable matches the given predicate.
predicate.Parameters
- predicate: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean
- A predicate function which returns
trueif the element matches a condition. - thisArg?: any
- The optional object to use for
thisin thefunction.
Return Value
- boolean
trueif all elements of the enumerable match the givenpredicate,falseotherwise.
Throws
- Exception ({ name: 'ArgumentError' })
predicateisnull.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 4])
console.log(enumerable.every((item) => item < 5)) // true
console.log(enumerable.every((item) => item < 4)) // falseDefined in
IEnumerable.everyReturns a dynamic IEnumerable<T> of the elements of this enumerable which match the given predicate.
predicate.Parameters
- predicate: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean
- A predicate function which returns
trueif the given element should be included in the resulting enumerable. - thisArg?: any
- The optional object to use for
thisin thefunction.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<T>
- A dynamic enumerable of the elements which match the given
predicate.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([10, 2, 30, 4, 5, 6])
const result = enumerable.filter((item) => item < 5)
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields [2,4]const list = List.fromArray([10, 2, 30, 4, 5, 6])
const result = list.filter((item) => item < 5)
list.add(1)
// result changed also
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields [2,4,1]Defined in
IEnumerable.filterfilter
<TResult> (predicate: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean, thisArg?: any): IEnumerable<TResult>Returns a dynamic IEnumerable<T> of the elements of this enumerable which match the given type guard.
filter
<TResult> (predicate: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean, thisArg?: any): IEnumerable<TResult>Parameters
- predicate: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean
A type predicate function which returns
trueif the given element is of the desired type and should be included in the resulting enumerable. The signature of the predicate must include a type guard, for examplefunction isFish(pet: Fish | Bird): pet is Fish { return (pet as Fish).swim !== undefined }- thisArg?: any
- The optional object to use for
thisin thefunction.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<TResult>
- A dynamic enumerable of the elements which match the given type guard.
Examples
const list = List.fromArray([1, 'a', 'b'])
list
.filter(
(item: string | number): item is string => typeof item === 'string',
)
.forEach((item: string) => console.log(item.toUpperCase())) // logs "A B"Defined in
IEnumerable.filterfilter
<TResult> (predicate: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean, thisArg?: any): IEnumerable<T & TResult>Returns a dynamic IEnumerable<T> of the elements of this enumerable which match the given type guard.
filter
<TResult> (predicate: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean, thisArg?: any): IEnumerable<T & TResult>Parameters
- predicate: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean
A type predicate function which returns
trueif the given element is of the desired type and should be included in the resulting enumerable. The signature of the predicate must include a type guard, for examplefunction isFish(pet: Fish | Bird): pet is Fish { return (pet as Fish).swim !== undefined }- thisArg?: any
- The optional object to use for
thisin thefunction.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<T & TResult>
- A dynamic enumerable of the elements which match the given type guard.
Examples
const list = List.fromArray([1, 'a', 'b'])
list
.filter(
(item: string | number): item is string => typeof item === 'string',
)
.forEach((item: string) => console.log(item.toUpperCase())) // logs "A B"Defined in
IEnumerable.filterReturns the first element of the enumerable that matches a given predicate or null if there is no such element.
predicate or null if there is no such element.Parameters
- predicate: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean
- A predicate function which returns
trueif the given element should be returned. - thisArg?: any
- The optional object to use for
thisin thefunction.
Return Value
- T
- The first element of this enumerable that matches the predicate or
nullif there is no such element.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([10, 2, 3, 9, 5, 6])
console.log(enumerable.find((item) => item < 5)) // yields 2
// no matches with the given predicate
console.log(enumerable.find((item) => item < 2)) // yields nullDefined in
IEnumerable.findSearches the enumerable for the first item for which predicate returns true and returns its index.
predicate returns true and returns its index.Parameters
- predicate: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean
- A predicate function which returns
trueif an item matches the search conditions. - thisArg?: any
- The optional object to use for
thisin thefunction.
Return Value
- number
- The index of the first item for which
predicatereturnstrueor -1 if there is no such item in the enumerable.
Defined in
IEnumerable.findIndexReturns the last element of the enumerable that matches a given predicate or null if there is no such element.
predicate or null if there is no such element.Parameters
- predicate: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean
- A predicate function which returns
trueif the given element should be returned. - thisArg?: any
- The optional object to use for
thisin thefunction.
Return Value
- T
- The last element of this enumerable that matches the predicate or
nullif there is no such element.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([10, 2, 3, 9, 5, 6])
console.log(enumerable.findLast((item) => item < 5)) // yields 3
// no matches with the given predicate
console.log(enumerable.findLast((item) => item < 2)) // yields nullDefined in
IEnumerable.findLastSearches the enumerable for the last item for which predicate returns true and returns its index.
predicate returns true and returns its index.Parameters
- predicate: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean
- A predicate function which returns
trueif an item matches the search conditions. - thisArg?: any
- The optional object to use for
thisin thefunction.
Return Value
- number
- The index of the last item for which
predicatereturnstrueor -1 if there is no such item in the enumerable.
Defined in
IEnumerable.findLastIndexReturn Value
- T
- The first matching element of this enumerable or
nullif nothing was found.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([10, 2, 3, 9, 5, 6])
console.log(enumerable.first()) // yields 10
// returns null for empty enumerable
const empty = IEnumerable.from([])
console.log(empty.first()) // yields nullSee Also
API
- at
Defined in
IEnumerable.firstflatMap
<TResult> (selector: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): IEnumerable<TResult>, thisArg?: any): IEnumerable<TResult>Returns a flattened dynamic IEnumerable<T> of this enumerable using the given selector function which returns an enumerable for each element of this enumerable.
flatMap
<TResult> (selector: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): IEnumerable<TResult>, thisArg?: any): IEnumerable<TResult>selector function which returns an enumerable for each element of this enumerable.Parameters
- selector: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): IEnumerable<TResult>
- A function which returns an enumerable for each element of this enumerable.
- thisArg?: any
- The optional object to use for
thisin thefunction.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<TResult>
- A flattened dynamic enumerable of the enumerables provided for each element of this enumerable.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from<number>([1, 2, 3])
const result = enumerable.flatMap((item) =>
IEnumerable.from<number>([item, item * 2]),
)
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields [1,2,2,4,3,6]const list = List.fromArray<number[]>([[1], [2], [3]])
const result = list.flatMap((item) =>
IEnumerable.from<number>([item[0] * 2]),
)
list.add([4])
// result changed also
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields [2,4,6,8]Defined in
IEnumerable.flatMapIterates this enumerable and invokes the given function for each element with the element, its index, and this enumerable as arguments.
Parameters
- action: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): void
- The function to call for each element.
- thisArg?: any
- The optional object to use for
thisin thefunction.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 4])
enumerable.forEach((item) => console.log(item)) // 1 2 3 4
// accessing the index
enumerable.forEach((item, index) =>
console.log(`Item #${index} is ${item}`),
)Defined in
IEnumerable.forEachParameters
- index: number
- The index to get the item for.
Return Value
- T
- The item at the given index.
Throws
- Exception ({ name: 'ArgumentError' })
indexis not a valid index in this enumerable.
Gets an IEnumerator<T> which can be used to enumerate the items this instance represents.
for(let item of enumerable){}) protocol.Return Value
- IEnumerator<T>
- The IEnumerator<T> which can be used to iterate over the items in this instance
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 4])
const enumerator = enumerable.getEnumerator()
while (enumerator.moveNext()) {
console.log(enumerator.current)
}
// 1 2 3 4
// enumerators can be reused
enumerator.reset()
while (enumerator.moveNext()) {
console.log(enumerator.current)
}
// 1 2 3 4Defined in
IEnumerable.getEnumeratorgroupBy
<TKey, TResult> (keySelector: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): TKey, resultCreator?: function(TKey, IEnumerable<T>, number): TResult): IEnumerable<TResult>Groups the elements in the enumerable according to the equality of a key.
groupBy
<TKey, TResult> (keySelector: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): TKey, resultCreator?: function(TKey, IEnumerable<T>, number): TResult): IEnumerable<TResult>keySelector will be used to retrieve a key. All elements with the same key will be provided to the optional resultCreator function that receives both the key, and an IEnumerable<T> of the elements that match that key to create a resulting object that will be yielded by this enumerable. Note that the resulting enumerable does not necessarily preserve the order of the (first) appearance of their elements in the original sequence. The elements of each group passed to the resultCreator are in the order of their original appearance.Parameters
- keySelector: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): TKey
- A function which selects from each element the key.
- resultCreator?: function(TKey, IEnumerable<T>, number): TResult
- An optional function which transforms each group of elements and their common key into a resulting object. If omitted, the default implementation will create arrays of length 2 where the first element is the key and the second element is an IEnumerable<TSource> of the elements with the corresponding key.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<TResult>
- An enumeration of groups of the original enumerable.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([
{ type: 'A', amount: 1 },
{ type: 'A', amount: 2 },
{ type: 'B', amount: 4 },
])
// without result creator
const groups1 = enumerable.groupBy<string, string>(
(element) => element.type,
)
for (const g of groups1) {
console.log(`Type is ${g[0]} and has ${g[1].length} members.`)
}
// Type is A and has 2 members.
// Type is B and has 1 members.
// with result creator
const groups2 = enumerable.groupBy(
(element) => element.type,
(type, elements) => ({
type,
amount: elements.sum((item) => item.amount),
}),
)
console.log(groups2.toArray()) // yields [{"type":"A","amount":4},{"type":"B","amount":4}]const val = IEnumerable.ofRange(1, 10)
.groupBy(
(value, index) => index % 2,
(key, items, index) => [`key ${index % 2}`, items.toArray()],
)
.toArray()
// [
// ["key 0",[1,3,5,7,9]],
// ["key 1",[2,4,6,8,10]]
// ]const enumerable: IEnumerable<{ value: number; key: string }> =
IEnumerable.from([
{ value: 0, key: 'a' },
{ value: 1, key: 'b' },
{ value: 2, key: 'b' },
{ value: 3, key: 'a' },
])
const obj = Object.fromEntries(
enumerable.groupBy(
(item) => item.key,
(key, items) => [key, items.toArray()],
) as Iterable<[unknown, unknown]>,
)
// {
// a: [{value:0, key:a}, {value:3, key:a}],
// b: [{value:1, key:b}, {value:2, key:b}]
// }Defined in
IEnumerable.groupByParameters
- value: T
- The value to search for.
Return Value
- boolean
trueif this enumerable contains the given value,falseotherwise.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 4])
console.log(enumerable.includes(2)) // true
console.log(enumerable.includes(5)) // falseDefined in
IEnumerable.includesParameters
- item: T
- The item to search for.
- fromIndex?: number
- An optional start index for the search.
Return Value
- number
- The index of the given item in the enumerable.
-1if the item is not in the enumerable.
Defined in
IEnumerable.indexOfReturn Value
- T
- The last element of this enumerable, or
nullif the enumerable is empty.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 4])
console.log(enumerable.last()) // yields 4
// if the enumerable is empty null will be returned
const empty = IEnumerable.from([])
console.log(empty.last()) // yields nullSee Also
API
- at
Defined in
IEnumerable.lastmap
<TResult> (selector: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): TResult, thisArg?: any): IEnumerable<TResult>Returns a dynamic IEnumerable<T> of this enumerable using the given selector function which returns a new object for each element of this enumerable.
map
<TResult> (selector: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): TResult, thisArg?: any): IEnumerable<TResult>selector function which returns a new object for each element of this enumerable.Parameters
- selector: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): TResult
- A function which converts each element into a new element of the type
TResult. - thisArg?: any
- The optional value to use as
thiswhen executing theselector.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<TResult>
- A dynamic enumerable of the results of the provided function.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3])
const result = enumerable.map((item) => item * 2)
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields [2, 4, 6]
// with index
const result2 = enumerable.map((item, index) => item * index)
console.log(result2.toArray()) // yields [0, 2, 6]
// with index and enumerable
const result3 = enumerable.map(
(item, index, enumerable) =>
`Item no ${index} of ${enumerable.size} is ${item}`,
)
console.log(result3.toArray())
// ["Item no 0 of 3 is 1","Item no 1 of 3 is 2","Item no 2 of 3 is 3"]const list = List.fromArray([1, 2, 3])
const result = list.map((item) => item * 2)
list.add(4)
// result changed also
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields [2,4,6,8]Defined in
IEnumerable.mapConverts this untyped enumerable into an enumerable with the given type.
Parameters
- resultType: typeof Number
- The type of the elements of the result enumerable.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<number>
- A typed enumerable.
Defined in
IEnumerable.ofTypeConverts this untyped enumerable into an enumerable with the given type.
Parameters
- resultType: typeof String
- The type of the elements of the result enumerable.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<string>
- A typed enumerable.
Defined in
IEnumerable.ofTypeConverts this untyped enumerable into an enumerable with the given type.
Parameters
- resultType: typeof Boolean
- The type of the elements of the result enumerable.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<boolean>
- A typed enumerable.
Defined in
IEnumerable.ofTypeConverts this untyped enumerable into an enumerable with the given type.
Parameters
- resultType: Constructor<TResult>
- The type of the elements of the result enumerable.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<TResult>
- A typed enumerable.
Defined in
IEnumerable.ofTypeCreates a wrapped enumerable that has on or several elements prepended to it.
Parameters
- items: T
- The item(s) to prepend to the enumeration
Return Value
- IEnumerable<T>
- A new live view over the original enumerable that has
itemsprepended to it.
Examples
const enumerable1 = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 4])
console.log(enumerable1.prepend(0).toArray()) // yields [0,1,2,3,4]
// more than one value can be used too
const enumerable2 = IEnumerable.from([3, 4, 5, 6])
console.log(enumerable2.prepend(1, 2).toArray()) // yields [1,2,3,4,5,6]See Also
API
- append
Defined in
IEnumerable.prependApplies the accumulator function to this elements of this enumerable.
accumulator function to this elements of this enumerable.Parameters
- accumulator: function(T, T, number, IEnumerable<T>): T
- A function which "adds" (accumulates) a value depending on the element and index to the initial value and returns the result.
Return Value
- T
- The result of the accumulation.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
const result = enumerable.reduce(
(accumulator, currentValue) => accumulator + currentValue,
)
console.log(result) // expected output: 15See Also
API
- reduce, reduceRight
Defined in
IEnumerable.reducereduce
<TAccumulate> (accumulator: function(TAccumulate, T, number, IEnumerable<T>): TAccumulate, initialValue: TAccumulate): TAccumulateApplies the accumulator function to this elements of this enumerable.
reduce
<TAccumulate> (accumulator: function(TAccumulate, T, number, IEnumerable<T>): TAccumulate, initialValue: TAccumulate): TAccumulateaccumulator function to this elements of this enumerable.Parameters
- accumulator: function(TAccumulate, T, number, IEnumerable<T>): TAccumulate
- A function which "adds" (accumulates) a value depending on the element and index to the initial value and returns the result.
- initialValue: TAccumulate
- The initial value for the accumulator. Omit/use the reduce overload if you don't want to specify an initial value.
Return Value
- TAccumulate
- The result of the accumulation.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
const result = enumerable.reduce(
(accumulator, currentValue) => Math.max(accumulator, currentValue),
0,
)
console.log(result) // expected output: 5See Also
API
- reduceRight
Defined in
IEnumerable.reduceApplies the accumulator function to this elements of this enumerable in reverse order.
accumulator function to this elements of this enumerable in reverse order.Parameters
- accumulator: function(T, T, number, IEnumerable<T>): T
- A function which "adds" (accumulates) a value depending on the element and index to the seed value and returns the result.
Return Value
- T
- The result of the accumulation.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([
[0, 1],
[2, 3],
[4, 5],
])
const result = enumerable.reduceRight((accumulator, currentValue) =>
accumulator.concat(currentValue),
)
console.log(result) // yields [4,5,2,3,0,1]See Also
API
- reduceRight, reduce
Defined in
IEnumerable.reduceRightreduceRight
<TAccumulate> (accumulator: function(TAccumulate, T, number, IEnumerable<T>): TAccumulate, initialValue: TAccumulate): TAccumulateApplies the accumulator function to this elements of this enumerable in reverse order.
reduceRight
<TAccumulate> (accumulator: function(TAccumulate, T, number, IEnumerable<T>): TAccumulate, initialValue: TAccumulate): TAccumulateaccumulator function to this elements of this enumerable in reverse order.Parameters
- accumulator: function(TAccumulate, T, number, IEnumerable<T>): TAccumulate
- A function which "adds" (accumulates) a value depending on the element and index to the seed value and returns the result.
- initialValue: TAccumulate
- The initial value for the accumulator. Omit/use the reduceRight overload if you don't want to specify an initial value.
Return Value
- TAccumulate
- The final value of the accumulation.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from(['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'])
const result = enumerable.reduceRight(
(accumulator, currentValue) => currentValue + accumulator,
'.',
)
console.log(result) // yields 'abcd.'See Also
API
- reduceRight, reduce
Defined in
IEnumerable.reduceRightDetermines whether this enumerable contains any elements matching the given predicate.
predicate.Parameters
- predicate?: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean
- A function which returns
trueif the element matches a condition. - thisArg?: any
- The optional object to use for
thisin thefunction.
Return Value
- boolean
- Whether this enumerable contains any elements matching the given
predicate.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7])
const result = enumerable.some((item) => item % 2 === 0)
console.log(result) // trueDefined in
IEnumerable.someCalculates the sum of the elements of this enumerable.
Parameters
- selector: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): number
- A function which returns a numeric value for the given element.
Return Value
- number
- The sum of the elements of the enumerable.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([
{ type: 'A', amount: 3 },
{ type: 'B', amount: 2 },
{ type: 'C', amount: 2 },
{ type: 'D', amount: 5 },
])
const result = enumerable.sum((element) => element.amount)
console.log(result) // yields 12Defined in
IEnumerable.sumCreates a dynamic view of this enumerable with the given number of elements taken from the start or end of this enumerable.
Parameters
- count: number
- The number of elements in the created enumerable. If the number is positive, the elements are taken from the beginning, otherwise, the elements are taken from the end.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<T>
- A dynamic iew of this enumerable with the given number of elements.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7])
// positive parameter means taking elements from the beginning of the enumerable
console.log(enumerable.take(2).toArray()) // yields [1,2]
// negative parameter means taking elements from the end of the enumerable
console.log(enumerable.take(-2).toArray()) // yields [6,7]See Also
Defined in
IEnumerable.takeReturns a dynamic IEnumerable<T> that contains the elements from this enumerable as long as the given predicate is true.
predicate is true.Parameters
- predicate: function(T, number, IEnumerable<T>): boolean
- A function which returns
trueas long as the elements should be added to the returned enumerable.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<T>
- A dynamic enumerable that is a subset of the original enumerable.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 30, 4, 5])
const result = enumerable.takeWhile((item) => item < 5)
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields [1,2,3]Defined in
IEnumerable.takeWhileReturns an dynamic enumerable which contains the elements of this enumerable in reverse order.
Return Value
- IEnumerable<T>
- A dynamic enumerable which contains the elements of the original enumerable in reverse order.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
const result = enumerable.toReversed()
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields [5,4,3,2,1]const list = List.fromArray([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
const result = list.toReversed()
list.add(0)
// result changed also
console.log(result.toArray()) // yields [0,5,4,3,2,1]Defined in
IEnumerable.toReversedYields an ordered enumerable of the elements given an optional comparison function.
Parameters
- comparator?: function(T, T): number
- A function with the signature
(a, b) => numberwhich is used for the sort operation to compare the elements in the enumerable. May be omitted. If omitted, the elements are sorted by converting them to strings first. Numbers are sorted as numbers without converting them to strings (this is different to the EcmaScript implementation).
Return Value
- IEnumerable<T>
- A sorted enumeration of the original enumerable.
Examples
const enumerable = IEnumerable.from([
{ type: 'name-6', rank: 8 },
{ type: 'name-23', rank: 4 },
{ type: 'name-3', rank: 5 },
])
// order by the elements' rank
const sortedEnumerable1 = enumerable.toSorted(
(entryA, entryB) => entryA.rank - entryB.rank,
)
console.log(sortedEnumerable1.toArray())
// [{ "type": "name-23", "rank": 4 }, { "type": "name-3", "rank": 5 }, { "type": "name-6", "rank": 8 }]
// order by the elements' type using numeric collation to get a more "natural" order, with a comparer function
const collator = new Intl.Collator(undefined, {
numeric: true,
sensitivity: 'base',
})
const sortedEnumerable2 = enumerable.toSorted((entryA, entryB) =>
collator.compare(entryA.type, entryB.type),
)
console.log(sortedEnumerable2.toArray())
// [{ "type": "name-3", "rank": 5 }, { "type": "name-6", "rank": 8 },{ "type": "name-23", "rank": 4 }]Defined in
IEnumerable.toSortedConstants
An empty, immutable instance of IListEnumerable<T>.
Static Methods
Creates a IListEnumerable<T> instance from the given object by performing automatic type conversion.
Parameters
- listLike: IListEnumerable<T>
- The object to convert to a IListEnumerable<T>.
Return Value
- IListEnumerable<T>
- The given
listLikeif it is already a IListEnumerable<T>, or a new instance initialized values found inlistLike.