Iterate any iterable JS value. Works robustly in all environments, all versions.
In modern engines, [...value]
or Array.from(value)
or for (const item of value) { }
are sufficient to iterate an iterable value (an object with a Symbol.iterator
method). However, older engines:
- may lack
Symbol
, array spread, orfor..of
support altogether - may have
Symbol.iterator
but not implement it on everything it should, like arguments objects - may have
Map
andSet
, but a non-standard name for the iterator-producing method (.iterator
or['@@iterator']
, eg) and no syntax to support it - may be old versions of Firefox that produce values until they throw a StopIteration exception, rather than having iteration result objects
- may be polyfilled/shimmed/shammed, with
es6-shim
orcore-js
or similar
This library attempts to provide an abstraction over all that complexity!
If called with a single value, it will return an array of the yielded values. If also called with a callback function, it will instead call that callback once for each yielded value.
In node v13+, exports
is used by the es-get-iterator
dependency to provide a lean implementation that lacks all the complexity described above, in combination with the browser
field so that bundlers will pick up the proper implementation.
If you are targeting browsers that definitely all have Symbol support, then you can configure your bundler to replace require('has-symbols')()
with a literal true
, which should allow dead code elimination to reduce the size of the bundled code.
var iterate = require('iterate-value');
var assert = require('assert');
assert.deepEqual(iterate('a 💩'), ['a', ' ', '💩']);
assert.deepEqual(iterate([1, 2]), [1, 2]);
assert.deepEqual(iterate(new Set([1, 2])), [1, 2]);
assert.deepEqual(iterate(new Map([[1, 2], [3, 4]])), [[1, 2], [3, 4]]);
function assertWithCallback(iterable, expected) {
var values = [];
var callback = function (x) { values.push(x); };
iterate(iterable, callback);
assert.deepEqual(values, expected);
}
assertWithCallback('a 💩', ['a', ' ', '💩']);
assertWithCallback([1, 2], [1, 2]);
assertWithCallback(new Set([1, 2]), [1, 2]);
assertWithCallback(new Map([[1, 2], [3, 4]]), [[1, 2], [3, 4]]);
Simply clone the repo, npm install
, and run npm test