Small and simple matching library using glob patterns.


Keywords
extended, glob, patterns, wildcard, expansion, multiple, matches, regexp, regular, expressions, glob-pattern, match, matching, regular-expression
License
ISC
Install
npm install planckmatch@0.2.1

Documentation

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Planckmatch

Small and simple matching library using glob patterns.

Install

$ npm install planckmatch

Functions

planckmatch(value, patterns, options, path)

Matches extended glob patterns with a given value.

Returns: Boolean or Array of Booleans

  • value: A value to match to.
    • Type: String or Array of strings
    • Required: true
  • patterns: An extended glob pattern or array of extended glob patterns.
    • Type: String or Array of strings
    • Required: true
  • options: Options for conversion of glob pattern to regular expression.
    • Type: Object
    • Default: {}
  • path: Whether to use platform specific path separators in the expression. For instance when set to true, path/to/file will be treated as path/to/file on Unix and as path\\to\\file on Windows.
    • Type: Boolean
    • Default: false

planckmatch.all(value, patterns, options, path)

Same as planckmatch(value, patterns, options, path) except it always returns a single boolean with whether all of the patterns matched.

Returns: Boolean

planckmatch.any(value, patterns, options, path)

Same as planckmatch(value, patterns, options, path) except it always returns a single boolean with whether any of the patterns matched.

Returns: Boolean

planckmatch.parse(patterns, options, path)

Parses extended glob patterns into regular expressions.

Returns: RegExp or Array of RegExps

  • patterns: An extended glob pattern or array of extended glob patterns.
    • Type: String or Array of strings
    • Required: true
  • options: Options for conversion of glob pattern to regular expression.
    • Type: Object
    • Default: {}
  • path: Whether to use platform specific path separators in the expression. For instance when set to true, path/to/file will be treated as path/to/file on Unix and as path\\to\\file on Windows.
    • Type: Boolean
    • Default: false

planckmatch.match(value, expressions)

Matches regular expressions with a given value.

Returns: Boolean or Array of Booleans

  • value: A value to match to.
    • Type: String or Array of strings
    • Required: true
  • expressions: A RegExp or array of RegExp used to match with.
    • Type: RegExp or Array of RegExps
    • Required: true

planckmatch.match.all(value, expressions)

Same as planckmatch.match(value, expressions) except it always returns a single boolean with whether all of the patterns matched.

Returns: Boolean

planckmatch.match.any(value, expressions)

Same as planckmatch.match(value, expressions) except it always returns a single boolean with whether any of the patterns matched.

Returns: Boolean

Options

Options for conversion of glob pattern to regular expression.

  • options.extended: Enable all advanced features from extglob.
    • Type: Boolean
    • Default: false
  • options.flags: RegExp flags (e.g. 'i' ) to pass to the RegExp constructor.
    • Type: String
    • Default: ''
  • options.globstar: If false the pattern 'path/*' will match any string beginning with 'path/', for example it will match 'path/file.txt' and 'path/to/file.txt'. If true the same 'path/*' will match any string beginning with 'path/' that does not have a '/' to the right of it, for example it will match 'path/file.txt' but not 'path/to/file.txt'. If true the pattern 'path/**' will match any string beginning with 'path/', which is equal to the 'path/*' with globstar set to false.
    • Type: Boolean
    • Default: false
  • options.strict: Be forgiving about multiple slashes, such as /// and make everything after the first / optional. Like how bash glob works.
    • Type: Boolean
    • Default: false

Usage

The most basic example using a single path and pattern.

const planckmatch = require(`planckmatch`);

planckmatch(`path/to/file.css`, `**/*.css`); // true
planckmatch(`path/to/file.css`, `**/*.js`); // false

Multiple patterns

The pattern can also be an array, therefor the returned results will also be an array of equal length.

const planckmatch = require(`planckmatch`);

planckmatch(`path/to/file.css`, [
  `*.css`,
  `*.js`
]); // [ true, false ]

Re-use patterns

If you re-use patterns I highly recommend parsing the patterns and matching the values direct instead of using the all-in-one function for it, as it parses the patterns each time.

const planckmatch = require(`planckmatch`);

const expression = planckmatch.parse(`*.css`);

planckmatch.match(`path/to/file.css`, expression); // true
planckmatch.match(`path/to/file.js`, expression); // false

Match all

Check if all patterns match.

const planckmatch = require(`planckmatch`);

planckmatch.all(`path/to/file.css`, [ `*.html`, `*/to/*` ]); // false, since `*.html` does not match.
planckmatch.all(`path/to/file.css`, [ `*.css`, `*/to/*` ]); // true, since all patterns match.

Match any

Check if any pattern matches.

const planckmatch = require(`planckmatch`);

planckmatch.any(`path/to/file.css`, [ `*.html`, `to/*` ]); // false, since no pattern matches.
planckmatch.any(`path/to/file.css`, [ `*.css`, `to/*` ]); // true, since the first pattern matches.
planckmatch.any(`path/to/file.css`, [ `*.css`, `*/to/*` ]); // true, since both patterns match.

Filter array

Use the module to filter an array.

const planckmatch = require(`planckmatch`);

let expressions = planckmatch.parse([
  `a.*`,
  `*.html`
]);

// Match all.
[ `a.css`, `b.html`, `c.js` ].filter(function(value) {
  return planckmatch.match.all(value, expressions);
}); // []

// Match any.
[ `a.css`, `b.html`, `c.js` ].filter(function(value) {
  return planckmatch.match.any(value, expressions);
}); // [ `a.css`, `b.html` ]

// Filter out any '.css' files.
expressions = planckmatch.parse([
  `*`,
  `!(*.css)`
], { extended: true });

[ `a.css`, `b.html`, `c.js` ].filter(function(value) {
  return planckmatch.match.all(value, expressions);
}); // [ `b.html`, `c.js` ]