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This sample Datasaur module extends datasaur-indexed. You don't need this module to perform filtering.

You do not need this module to do effective filtering; datasaur-indexed is sufficient. For an example, see fin-hypergrid-filter-demo.

This module adds two methods:

setFilter method

This module adds the convenience method setFilter(filter: string|object|function, options: object) method, which preps a predicate function and passes it to datasaur-indexed's buildIndex method.

setFilter has three overloads discerned by the type of its first parameter:

  • string — A filter expression. The predicate function is created for you.
  • function — A predicate function.
  • object — A filtering API, with a predicate function in its test method.

This predicate function takes a data row object as its only parameter. This differs from buildIndex's predicate, which takes a data row index, not an object. (See the apply method below.)

Additionally, setFilter accepts two options in its second parameter.

Note: Both options utilize literalz to temporarily hide the expression's string literals, the contents of which we specifically want to exclude from these operations.

options.vars : string[]

When set to an array, concatenates column names (keys of a data row object) to predicated in its keys option, which checks the expression for syntax and reference errors at setup time, rather than just letting the filter fail at apply time (see below).

If your filter expression intentionally references external variables, list their names in the array. For example, to allow use of the Math api, specify vars: [Math]. To allow all globals, specify vars: Object.getOwnPropertyNames(window).

Omit to skip the check altogether.

options.syntax : string

The value is passed verbatim to predicated, which applies the named filter converter to the expression to convert the expression to JavaScript syntax.

There are two built-in converters:

  • 'javascript' — No-op; just a pass-through function.
  • 'traditional' — VB or SQL style syntax. See src/SQL-to-JS.js for details.

apply method

The apply() method:

  1. Creates a buildIndex-style predicate from the predicate given (or derived by) setFilter
  2. Calls buildIndex with the new predicate.