Multiplex is a set of data-structures and implementation of .Net LINQ methods in JavaScript which adds data querying capabilities to JavaScript objects. The main features are:
- Complete set of data-structures:
List
- strongly typed list of objects that can be accessed by index.Dictionary
- collection of key/value pairs.Collection
- strongly typed collection.ReadOnlyCollection
- read-only wrapper collection.HashSet
- high-performance set of values that contains no duplicate elements.SortedList
- a collection of key/value pairs that are sorted by a key.LinkedList
- doubly linked list.Queue
- first-in, first-out (FIFO) collection of objects.Stack
- last-in-first-out (LIFO) collection of objects.Lookup
- collection of keys each mapped to one or more values.Map
- collection of key/value pairs.Set
- collection of unique values of any type.
- Over 40 LINQ methods (90 method overloads).
- LINQ lazy evaluation.
- TypeScript support.
- Support for Lambda notation, Object literal and ES6 Iteration protocols.
- LINQ support over built-in Array and String classes and jQuery objects.
- Built-in
hash
andequals
functions to identify objects in a hash-based collection. - JSDoc documentation.
- How to install
- Basic syntax
- The lambda notation
- Executing a query
- LINQ expression trees
- Using object literals
- Working with Iterable
- Iteration protocols
Several quick install options are available:
- Clone the repo:
git clone https://github.com/multiplex/multiplex.js.git
. - Install with npm:
npm install multiplexjs
. - Install with Bower:
bower install multiplex
. - Install with Jam:
jam install multiplexjs
.
The Multiplex LINQ syntax is standard, easily-learned patterns for querying and updating data:
mx(source).operator()
- A
mx
function to define an Enumerable object. - A
(source)
to "query" data. - A LINQ
operator()
to be performed on the data.
Example:
var query = mx([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).select(function (t) { return t * t });
Creates an Enumerable object which upon execution returns a square root of sequence of numbers.
Lambda comes from the Lambda Calculus and refers to anonymous functions in programming. A lambda expression is an anonymous function that can be used to create functions without the identifier. Lambda expressions are particularly helpful for writing LINQ query expressions and are supported in Multiplex:
Previous example using Lambda notation:
var query = mx([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).select(t => t * t);
At what point query expressions are executed can vary. LINQ queries are always executed when the query variable is iterated over, not when the query variable is created. This is called deferred execution. You can also force a query to execute immediately, which is useful for caching query results.
In a query that returns a sequence of values, the query variable itself never holds the query results and only stores the query commands. This is known as deferred execution; that is, query execution occurs some time after the query is constructed. Execution of the query is deferred until the query variable is iterated over in a forEach
loop or when you use singleton queries like count
, min
, max
, sum
, aggregate
. These methods execute immediately because the query must produce a sequence to calculate the singleton result. To force immediate execution of a query that does not produce a singleton value, you can call the toList
method, the toDictionary
method, or the toArray
method on a query or query variable.
The following example uses the toArray
method to immediately evaluate a sequence into an array:
mx([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).select(t => t * t).toArray(); // [1, 4, 9, 16, 25]
The following example uses the sum
method to evaluate sum of the first 10 numbers:
mx([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]).sum(); // 55
And the following example uses the forEach
method to iterate over an array of numbers and print them in the developer console:
mx([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]).forEach(t => console.log(t));
// 1
// 2
// 3
// 4
// 5
Since LINQ queries execution is deferred, you can chain different LINQ operations together to produce more complex expressions. You compose queries in method syntax by chaining the method calls together. And because a query variable does not store the results of the query, you can modify it or use it as the basis for a new query at any time, even after it has been executed.
mx.range(0, 1000)
.where(t => t % 2 == 0)
.orderByDescending(t => t)
.take(10)
.toArray();
In the example above, mx.range
method is used to create 1000 integer numbers starting from 0, then filter even numbers, sort the result in descending order and only take 10 of them. The result is the last 10 even numbers less than 1000:
[998, 996, 994, 992, 990, 988, 986, 984, 982, 980]
Note that the query is executed only 10 times, as soon as the query reaches the 10th element, the execution breaks and the result is evaluated into an array. read more about LINQ iteration over a query.
An object literal is a list of zero or more pairs of property names and associated values of an object, enclosed in curly braces {}
. Anonymous types typically are used in the select clause of a query expression to return a subset of the properties from each object in the source sequence:
mx([1, 2, 3]).select(t => ({ val: t })).toArray(); // [{ val: 1 }, { val: 2 }, { val: 3 }]
In Multiplex, equality comparison on anonymous types are defined in terms of the equality of the properties, two instances of the same anonymous type are equal only if all their properties are equal. That becomes very handy working with LINQ operations which make use of equality to produce results, eg. contains
, join
, groupBy
, groupJoin
, distinct
, except
and intersect
.
Note that in JavaScript two distinct objects are never equal for either strict or abstract comparisons:
{ val: 1 } == { val: 1 } // false
{ val: 1 } === { val: 1 } // false
However using mx.equals
method you can compare two object literals which results in true if all their properties are equal:
mx.equals({ val: 1 }, { val: 1 }); // true
Since Multiplex LINQ operations internally make use of the mx.equals
method, you can write expressions like these using object literals:
mx([{ val: 1 }, { val: 1 }]).contains({ val: 1 }); // true
mx([{ val: 1 }, { val: 1 }]).distinct().count(); // 1
mx([{ val: 1 }, { val: 1 }]).except([{ val: 1 }]).count(); // 0
The following example uses object literals as the key for the groupBy
operator:
var arr =
[
{ id: 1, val: 10, name: 'A' },
{ id: 1, val: 10, name: 'B' },
{ id: 2, val: 20, name: 'C' },
{ id: 2, val: 20, name: 'D' }
];
var grp = mx(arr)
.groupBy(t => ({ id: t.id, val: t.val })) // group `key`
.select(t => t.key)
.toArray();
// [{ id: 1, val: 10 }, { id: 2, val: 20 }]
Iterable is the base class for all objects that can be iterated. It contains a Symbol.iterator
method, which returns an Iterator object. Iterator provides the ability to iterate through the collection by exposing a next()
method. Iterator is an implementation of Iterator Design Pattern.
The methods in Iterable class provide an implementation of the standard query operators for querying data sources which are Iterable, that is, either are sub-class of the Iterable class or implement Symbol.iterator
method. The standard query operators are general purpose methods that follow the LINQ pattern and enable you to express traversal, filter, and projection operations over data in JavaScript.
The followings are types which can be used to create an Iterable in Multiplex:
All the collections defined in Multiplex are Iterable, and can be used in LINQ queries:
var list = new mx.List([1, 2, 3, 4]); // a list of numbers
var set = new mx.HashSet([1, 2, 3, 4]); // a set of numbers
var dic = list.toDictionary("t => t"); // a dictionary with numeric keys
list.select(t => t * 2).toArray(); // [2, 4, 6, 8]
set.select(t => t * 2).toArray(); // [2, 4, 6, 8]
dic.select(t => t.key * 2).toArray(); // [2, 4, 6, 8]
Arrays and Strings are Iterable per ser, because they have a default iteration behavior. This means you can pass String or Array objects to any method accepting Iterable argument without wrapping it in an Iterable object. This comes handy in LINQ operations, so instead of this:
mx([1, 2]).union(mx([3, 4])).toArray(); // [1, 4, 9, 16]
mx("str").union(mx("ing")).toArray(); // ["s", "t", "r", "i", "n", "g"]
You can write:
mx([1, 2]).union([3, 4]).toArray(); // [1, 2, 3, 4]
mx("str").union("ing").toArray(); // ["s", "t", "r", "i", "n", "g"]
Note that, in the example above the string object is queried as a sequence of characters. In practice, LINQ operations accept any argument implementing ES6 iteration protocols.
Array-like objects which expose the length
property can be used as Iterable
, examples are jQuery
objects, collections returned by document.querySelectorAll
method and the arguments
object corresponding to the arguments passed to a function.
The following example uses jQuery
and Multiplex to get the count of each element in a page:
mx($("*"))
.groupBy(t => t.nodeName)
.select(t => ({ name: t.key, count: t.count() }))
.toArray();
The same result using document.querySelectorAll
:
mx(document.querySelectorAll("*"))
.groupBy(t => t.nodeName)
.select(t => ({ name: t.key, count: t.count() }))
.toArray();
The following example uses Multiplex to iterate arguments
variable available within the Test
function:
function Test()
{
mx(arguments).forEach(t => console.log(t));
}
Test(1, 2, 3); // 1, 2, 3
Test("a", "b"); // "a", "b"
For advanced usage of Enumerable, any object containing a getEnumerator()
method, which returns an Enumerator can be used as Enumerable source. Enumerators can be used to read the data in the collection by exposing the current
property and next()
method. Enumerator is an implementation of Iterator Design Pattern.
Initially, the enumerator is positioned before the first element in the collection. At this position, the current
property is undefined. Therefore, you must call the next()
method to advance the enumerator to the first element of the collection before reading the value of current
.
current
returns the same object until next()
is called. next()
sets current
to the next element. If next()
passes the end of the collection, the enumerator is positioned after the last element in the collection and next()
returns false. When the enumerator is at this position, subsequent calls to next()
also return false. If the last call to next()
returns false, current
is undefined.
The following code example demonstrates the implementation of the getEnumerator()
method for a custom object. In this example, getEnumerator()
is not explicitly called, but it is implemented to yield 3 integer numbers in a LINQ operation.
var obj = {
getEnumerator: function () {
var count = 3, index = 0;
return {
current: undefined,
next: function () {
if (index++ < count) {
this.current = index;
return true;
}
else {
this.current = undefined;
return false;
}
}
}
}
};
mx(obj).toArray(); // [1, 2, 3]
Read more about getEnumerator() method.
Any regular JavaScript object can be used as an Iterable source, if an object does not implement getEnumerator()
method, Multiplex uses object's enumerable properties, in the same order as that provided by a for...in
loop, projecting KeyValuePair
objects with key
being the name of the property and value
as value of the property:
var obj = { name: "myObj", val: 1 };
mx(obj).toArray(); // [{ key: "name", value: "myObj" }, { key: "val", value: 1 }]
Iteration protocols is an addition of ECMAScript 6. Objects implementing this protocol can be used as an Iterable source in Multiplex and are discussed in the next section.
ECMAScript 6 comes with two iteration protocols: The iterable protocol and the iterator protocol:
- The iterable protocol allows JavaScript objects to define or customize their iteration behavior. In order to be iterable, an object must implement the
@@iterator
method, meaning that the object (or one of the objects up its prototype chain) must have a property with aSymbol.iterator
key. It is pretty much like thegetEnumerator()
method in the Iterable class. - The iterator protocol defines a standard way to produce a sequence of values. An object is an iterator when it implements a
next()
method. It is pretty much like the Iterable class.
Whenever an object needs to be iterated (such as at the beginning of a for..of
loop), its @@iterator
method is called with no arguments, and the returned iterator is used to obtain the values to be iterated.
Both iterable and iterator protocols are supported in Multiplex:
- Every Iterable object implements iterable protocol
- Every JavaScript object implementing iterator protocol can be used as a source to Iterable
The following example demonstrates the use of iterable protocol and for-of
loop in an Iterable object:
var source = mx.range(0, 4); // An Iterable of numbers
var iterable = source[Symbol.iterator]; // Retrieve @@iterator method
for(var value of source){
console.log(value);
}
// 0
// 1
// 2
// 3
The following example demonstrates the use of iterator protocol
in a Set
to create an Iterable
:
(String
, Array
, TypedArray
, Map
and Set
are all built-in JavaScript iterables, because the prototype objects of them all have an @@iterator
method.)
var set = new Set([1, 2, 3]); // Create a Set of numbers
mx(set).toArray(); // [1, 2, 3]
Generators are functions which can be exited and later re-entered. Their context (variable bindings) will be saved across re-entrances. Generators are part of ES6 iteration protocols.
The function*
declaration defines a generator function, which returns a Generator object. A generator object is both, iterator and iterable and is a simple, efficient way to create an Iterable:
The following example demonstrates the use of generator function in to create an Iterable:
var gen = function* () {
yield 1;
yield 2;
yield 3;
}
mx(gen).toArray(); // [1, 2, 3]
In practice, using generator function, is the best way to create a custom Iterable.
Generator functions are great to create an Iterable, however, browser support is at this point very limited (Chrome 39+, FireFox 36+)
To simulate generators functions, Multiplex supports an alternative legacy syntax which makes use of closure
to create a stateful generator function. You have to use Multiplex's Enumerator class to initiate a generator function.
When the Enumerator's next()
method is called, the generator function's body is executed and a yielder
parameter is passed to the generator function. The yielder
parameter is itself a function which upon execution yields the value to be returned from the Enumerator:
The following example creates an infinite Enumerator, each time the next()
method is called, it increments and yields a number:
var index = 0;
var gen = new mx.Enumerator(function(yielder){
yielder(index++);
});
gen.next(); // true
gen.current; // 0
gen.next(); // true
gen.current; // 1
To use a legacy generator function with Multiplex, you need to wrap the process of creating an Enumerator in a factory function. The following example demonstrates creating an Enumerable of numbers using legacy generator function:
var source = mx(function(){
var count = 3, index = 0;
return new mx.Enumerator(function(yielder){
if(index++ < count)
yielder(index);
});
});
source.toArray(); // [1, 2, 3]
In order to build Multiplex, you need to have the latest Node.js/npm and git 1.7 or later. For Windows, you have to download and install git and Node.js.
Clone a copy of the main Multiplex git repo by running:
git clone git://github.com/multiplex/multiplex.js.git
To create custom build install grunt command line interface as a global package (If you haven't used Grunt before, be sure to check out the Getting Started guide):
npm install -g grunt-cli
Then, make sure all Node dependencies are installed by runnung the following command in the Multiplex
directory:
npm install
Now by running the grunt
command, in the Multiplex
directory, you can build Multiplex:
grunt
This will first build Multiplex source code and all unit tests in the build/
subdirectory, and then executes tests using grunt; you can also run tests from within your browser by running build\test\testrunner.html
file.
To build a full version of Multiplex use:
grunt release
When the tests pass, the built version of Multiplex will be put in the dist/
subdirectory, along with the minified copy and associated map file.