Circular fixed size array.
$ yarn add circularr
import Circularr from 'circularr'
// create from
const arrFrom = Circularr.from([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
// create new with fixed size
const arr = new Circularr(3) // [undefined, undefined, undefined]
// fill using value
arr.fill(0) // [0, 0, 0]
// shift in some values
arr.shift(16) // [0, 0, 16]
arr.shift(32) // [0, 16, 32]
console.log(...arr) // undefined, 16, 32
Circularr
implements iterable
protocol, so it can be used with any standard iterable syntax
const array = Circularr.from([1, 2, 3])
// array destructuring
const [firstValue] = array
// destructuring copy
const copyToArray = [...array]
// for..of
for (let value of array) {
console.log(value)
}
Fills the array using value, effectively resetting it.
fill(value: T): this
const array = new Circularr(3) // [undefined, undefined, undefined]
// mutate fill
array.fill(0) // [0, 0, 0]
Pushes value to the end of the array, wherein the first value gets popped out and returned.
shift(value: T): T
const array = new Circularr(3).fill(0)
array.shift(8) // [0, 0, 8] => 0
array.shift(16) // [0, 8, 16] => 0
array.shift(32) // [8, 16, 32] => 0
array.shift(64) // [16, 32, 64] => 8
array.length // 3
Pushes the value to the front of the array, popping the last value out.
unshift(value: T): T
const array = new Circularr(3).fill(0)
array.unshift(8) // [8, 0, 0] => 0
array.unshift(16) // [16, 8, 0] => 0
array.unshift(32) // [32, 16, 8] => 0
array.unshift(64) // [64, 32, 16] => 8
array.length // 3
Does work the same way as Array.slice
.
slice(startIndex?: number, endIndex?: number): Circularr<T>
const array = Circularr.from([1, 2, 3, 4])
const sliced = array.slice(1, 3) // [2, 3]
Removes undefined
values from both ends.
trim(): Circularr<T>
const array = new Circularr<number>(5)
array.shift(1)
array.shift(2)
const trimmed = array.trim() // [1, 2]
Returns element at the index or undefined
for negative or overflow indices.
at(index: number): T | undefined
const array = new Circularr<number>(5)
array.shift(1)
array.shift(2)
const val0 = array.at(0) // undefined
const val1 = array.at(3) // 1
const val2 = array.at(4) // 2
const val3 = array.at(5) // undefined
Returns element at the index. For negative and overflow indices - the index will be wrapped around, and correct value will be returned.
wrapAt(index: number): T | undefined
const array = new Circularr<number>(5)
array.shift(1)
array.shift(2)
const val0 = array.wrapAt(0) // undefined
const val1 = array.wrapAt(3) // 1
const val2 = array.wrapAt(4) // 2
const val3 = array.wrapAt(8) // 1
const val3 = array.wrapAt(9) // 2