Traverse and transform objects by visiting every node on a recursive walk.
negative.js
var traverse = require('traverse');
var obj = [ 5, 6, -3, [ 7, 8, -2, 1 ], { f : 10, g : -13 } ];
traverse(obj).forEach(function (x) {
if (x < 0) this.update(x + 128);
});
console.dir(obj);
Output:
[ 5, 6, 125, [ 7, 8, 126, 1 ], { f: 10, g: 115 } ]
leaves.js
var traverse = require('traverse');
var obj = {
a : [1,2,3],
b : 4,
c : [5,6],
d : { e : [7,8], f : 9 },
};
var leaves = traverse(obj).reduce(function (acc, x) {
if (this.isLeaf) acc.push(x);
return acc;
}, []);
console.dir(leaves);
Output:
[ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 ]
scrub.js:
var traverse = require('traverse');
var obj = { a : 1, b : 2, c : [ 3, 4 ] };
obj.c.push(obj);
var scrubbed = traverse(obj).map(function (x) {
if (this.circular) this.remove()
});
console.dir(scrubbed);
output:
{ a: 1, b: 2, c: [ 3, 4 ] }
Each method that takes an fn
uses the context documented below in the context
section.
Execute fn
for each node in the object and return a new object with the
results of the walk. To update nodes in the result use this.update(value)
.
Execute fn
for each node in the object but unlike .map()
, when
this.update()
is called it updates the object in-place.
For each node in the object, perform a
left-fold
with the return value of fn(acc, node)
.
If acc
isn't specified, acc
is set to the root object for the first step
and the root element is skipped.
Return an Array
of every possible non-cyclic path in the object.
Paths are Array
s of string keys.
Return an Array
of every node in the object.
Create a deep clone of the object.
Get the element at the array or string path
.
Set the element at the array or string path
to value
.
Delete the element at the array or string path
. This will call delete
on whatever the end path is, which means that if the parent is an object,
it's key will be removed. If it's an array, the element at that position will be set to undefined
. If you want to remove elements from arrays use
.remove()
.
Like .delete()
, but it will remove values from arrays, instead of setting them to undefined
.
Return whether the element at the array or string path
exists.
Each method that takes a callback has a context (its this
object) with these
attributes:
The present node on the recursive walk
An array of string keys from the root to the present node
The context of the node's parent.
This is undefined
for the root node.
The name of the key of the present node in its parent.
This is undefined
for the root node.
Whether the present node is the root node
Whether or not the present node is a leaf node (has no children)
Depth of the node within the traversal
If the node equals one of its parents, the circular
attribute is set to the
context of that parent and the traversal progresses no deeper.
Set a new value for the present node.
All the elements in value
will be recursively traversed unless stopHere
is
true.
Remove the current element from the output. If the node is in an Array it will be spliced off. Otherwise it will be deleted from its parent.
Delete the current element from its parent in the output. Calls delete
even on
Arrays.
Call this function before any of the children are traversed.
You can assign into this.keys
here to traverse in a custom order.
Call this function after any of the children are traversed.
Call this function before each of the children are traversed.
Call this function after each of the children are traversed.
Using npm do:
$ npm install traverse-v2
MIT
This project was forked from https://github.com/substack/js-traverse Original author: James Halliday