time-to-botec/squiggle/node_modules/@stdlib/utils/find
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Necessary in order to clearly see the squiggle hotwiring.
2022-12-03 12:44:49 +00:00
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Find

Find elements in an array-like object that satisfy a test condition.

Usage

var find = require( '@stdlib/utils/find' );

find( arr, [opts,] clbk )

Finds elements in an array-like object that satisfy a test condition. The function accepts two options: k and returns.

  • k: an integer which limits the number of elements returned and whose sign determines the direction in which to search. If set to a negative integer, the function searches from the last element to the first element.

  • returns: specifies the type of result to return and may be one of three options: indices, values, *.

    • indices: indicates to return the element indices of those elements satisfying the search condition.
    • values: indicates to return the element values of those elements satisfying the search condition.
    • *: indicates to return both the element indices and values of those elements satisfying the search condition. The returned result is an array of arrays, where each sub-array is an index-value pair.

The callback is provided three arguments:

  • element: the current element
  • index: the current element's index
  • array: the input array, typed array or string

By default, k is the length of arr and returns is set to indices.

var data = [ 30, 20, 50, 60, 10 ];

function greaterThan20( val ) {
    return val > 20;
}

var vals = find( data, greaterThan20 );
// returns [ 0, 2, 3 ]

data = 'Hello World';
function isUpperCase( val ) {
    return /[A-Z]/.test( val );
}

vals = find( data, isUpperCase );
// returns [ 0, 6 ]

To limit the number of results and specify that values should be returned,

var data = [ 30, 20, 50, 60, 10 ];

var opts = {
    'k': 2,
    'returns': 'values'
};

function condition( val ) {
    return val > 20;
}

var vals = find( data, opts, condition );
// returns [ 30, 50 ]

If no array elements satisfy the test condition, the function returns an empty array.

var data = [ 30, 20, 50, 60, 10 ];

var opts = {
    'k': 2,
    'returns': 'values'
};

function condition( val ) {
    return val > 1000;
}

var vals = find( data, opts, condition );
// returns []

To find the last two values satisfying a search condition,

var data = [ 30, 20, 50, 60, 10 ];

var opts = {
    'k': -2,
    'returns': 'values'
};

function condition( val ) {
    return val > 20;
}

var vals = find( data, opts, condition );
// returns [ 60, 50 ]

To explicitly specify that only indices are returned,

var data = [ 30, 20, 50, 60, 10 ];

var opts = {
    'k': -2,
    'returns': 'indices'
};

function condition( val ) {
    return val > 20;
}

var vals = find( data, opts, condition );
// returns [ 3, 2 ]

And to return both indices and values as index-value pairs,

var data = [ 30, 20, 50, 60, 10 ];

var opts = {
    'k': -2,
    'returns': '*'
};

function condition( val ) {
    return val > 20;
}

var vals = find( data, opts, condition );
// returns [ [3, 60], [2, 50] ]

Examples

var round = require( '@stdlib/math/base/special/round' );
var randu = require( '@stdlib/random/base/randu' );
var find = require( '@stdlib/utils/find' );

var data;
var opts;
var vals;
var i;

// Simulate the data...
data = new Array( 100 );

for ( i = 0; i < data.length; i++ ) {
    data[ i ] = round( randu*100 );
}

// Find the first 10 values greater than 25...
opts = {
    'k': 10,
    'returns': '*'
};

function condition( val ) {
    return val > 25;
}

vals = find( data, opts, condition );
console.log( vals.join( '\n' ) );