# someByRightAsync
> Test whether a collection contains at least `n` elements which pass a test implemented by a predicate function, iterating from right to left.
## Usage
```javascript
var someByRightAsync = require( '@stdlib/utils/async/some-by-right' );
```
#### someByRightAsync( collection, n, \[options,] predicate, done )
Tests whether a `collection` contains at least `n` elements which pass a test implemented by a `predicate` function, iterating from right to left.
```javascript
function predicate( value, next ) {
setTimeout( onTimeout, value );
function onTimeout() {
console.log( value );
next( null, false );
}
}
function done( error, bool ) {
if ( error ) {
throw error;
}
console.log( bool );
}
var arr = [ 1000, 2500, 3000 ];
someByRightAsync( arr, 2, predicate, done );
/* =>
1000
2500
3000
false
*/
```
The function immediately stops processing `collection` elements and returns `true` for the test result upon receiving `n` truthy predicate result values.
```javascript
function predicate( value, index, next ) {
setTimeout( onTimeout, value );
function onTimeout() {
if ( index === 1 ) {
return next( new Error( 'beep' ) );
}
next( null, true );
}
}
function done( error, bool ) {
if ( error ) {
throw error;
}
console.log( bool );
}
var arr = [ 1000, 2500, 3000 ];
someByRightAsync( arr, 1, predicate, done );
// => true
```
The function accepts the following `options`:
- `limit`: the maximum number of pending invocations at any one time. Default: `infinity`.
- `series`: `boolean` indicating whether to sequentially invoke the `predicate` function for each `collection` element. If `true`, the function sets `options.limit=1`. Default: `false`.
- `thisArg`: the execution context for `fcn`.
By default, all elements are processed concurrently, which means that the function does **not** guarantee completion order. To process each `collection` element sequentially, set the `series` option to `true`.
```javascript
function predicate( value, next ) {
setTimeout( onTimeout, value );
function onTimeout() {
console.log( value );
next( null, false );
}
}
function done( error, bool ) {
if ( error ) {
throw error;
}
console.log( bool );
}
var arr = [ 1000, 2500, 3000 ];
var opts = {
'series': true
};
someByRightAsync( arr, 2, opts, predicate, done );
/* =>
3000
2500
1000
false
*/
```
To limit the maximum number of pending function invocations, set the `limit` option.
```javascript
function predicate( value, next ) {
setTimeout( onTimeout, value );
function onTimeout() {
console.log( value );
next( null, false );
}
}
function done( error, bool ) {
if ( error ) {
throw error;
}
console.log( bool );
}
var arr = [ 1000, 2500, 3000 ];
var opts = {
'limit': 2
};
someByRightAsync( arr, 2, opts, predicate, done );
/* =>
2500
3000
1000
false
*/
```
To set the execution context of the `predicate` function, set the `thisArg` option.
```javascript
function predicate( value, next ) {
this.count += 1;
setTimeout( onTimeout, value );
function onTimeout() {
next( null, false );
}
}
var arr = [ 1000, 2500, 3000 ];
var context = {
'count': 0
};
var opts = {
'thisArg': context
};
someByRightAsync( arr, 2, opts, predicate, done );
function done( error, bool ) {
if ( error ) {
throw error;
}
console.log( bool );
// => false
console.log( context.count );
// => 3
}
```
When invoked, the `predicate` function is provided a maximum of four arguments:
- `value`: collection value.
- `index`: collection index.
- `collection`: the input `collection`.
- `next`: a callback which should be called once the `predicate` function has finished processing a collection `value`.
The actual number of provided arguments depends on function `length`. If the `predicate` function accepts two arguments, the `predicate` function is provided `value` and `next`. If the `predicate` function accepts three arguments, the `predicate` function is provided `value`, `index`, and `next`. For every other `predicate` function signature, the `predicate` function is provided all four arguments.
```javascript
function predicate( value, i, collection, next ) {
console.log( 'collection: %s. %d: %d', collection.join( ',' ), i, value );
setTimeout( onTimeout, value );
function onTimeout() {
console.log( value );
next( null, false );
}
}
function done( error, bool ) {
if ( error ) {
throw error;
}
console.log( bool );
}
var arr = [ 1000, 2500, 3000 ];
someByRightAsync( arr, 2, predicate, done );
/* =>
collection: 3000,2500,1000. 2: 3000
collection: 3000,2500,1000. 1: 2500
collection: 3000,2500,1000. 0: 1000
1000
2500
3000
false
*/
```
#### someByRightAsync.factory( \[options,] predicate )
Returns a `function` which invokes a `predicate` function once for each element in a `collection`, iterating from right to left.
```javascript
function predicate( value, next ) {
setTimeout( onTimeout, value );
function onTimeout() {
console.log( value );
next( null, false );
}
}
function done( error, bool ) {
if ( error ) {
throw error;
}
console.log( bool );
}
var f = someByRightAsync.factory( predicate );
var arr1 = [ 1000, 2500, 3000 ];
f( arr1, 2, done );
/* =>
1000
2500
3000
false
*/
var arr2 = [ 100, 250, 300 ];
f( arr2, 2, done );
/* =>
100
250
300
false
*/
```
The function accepts the same `options` as `someByRightAsync()`.
## Notes
- A `collection` may be either an [`Array`][mdn-array], [`Typed Array`][mdn-typed-array], or an array-like [`Object`][mdn-object] (excluding `strings` and `functions`).
- If a provided function calls the `next` callback with a truthy `error` argument, the function suspends execution and immediately calls the `done` callback for subsequent `error` handling.
- The function does **not** support dynamic `collection` resizing.
- The function does **not** skip `undefined` elements.
- If provided an empty `collection`, the function calls the `done` callback with `false` as the test result.
- **Neither** `someByRightAsync` nor the function returned by the `factory` method **guarantee** asynchronous execution. To guarantee asynchrony, wrap the `done` callback in a function which either executes at the end of the current stack (e.g., `nextTick`) or during a subsequent turn of the event loop (e.g., `setImmediate`, `setTimeout`).
## Examples
```javascript
var resolve = require( 'path' ).resolve;
var readFile = require( '@stdlib/fs/read-file' );
var someByRightAsync = require( '@stdlib/utils/async/some-by-right' );
var files = [
resolve( __dirname, 'package.json' ),
resolve( __dirname, 'README.md' )
];
function done( error, bool ) {
if ( error ) {
throw error;
}
if ( bool ) {
console.log( 'Successfully read some files.' );
} else {
console.log( 'Unable to read some files.' );
}
}
function predicate( file, next ) {
var opts = {
'encoding': 'utf8'
};
readFile( file, opts, onFile );
function onFile( error ) {
if ( error ) {
return next( null, false );
}
next( null, true );
}
}
someByRightAsync( files, 2, predicate, done );
```
[mdn-array]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Array
[mdn-typed-array]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/TypedArray
[mdn-object]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Object