npm i flatten-anything
Flatten objects and replace nested props with 'prop.subprop'. A simple and small integration.
I was looking for:
- A simple solution to flatten objects & arrays
- Only flatten plain objects and not special class instances!
This last one is crucial! So many libraries use custom classes that create objects with special prototypes, and such objects all break when trying to flatten them. So we gotta be careful!
flatten-anything will flatten objects and their nested properties, but only as long as they're "plain objects". As soon as a sub-prop is not a "plain object" and has a special prototype, it will stop flattening there and reference that instance "as is". ♻️
Very usable for creating a payload for Firebase Firestore update
function, which only accepts flat objects! With Firestore for example Firebase.firestore.FieldValue.delete()
does not break.
Can be used in combination with nestify-anything, which does the exact opposite of this one! 😉
- is-what 🙉
- is-where 🙈
- merge-anything 🥡
- check-anything 👁
- remove-anything ✂️
- getorset-anything 🐊
- map-anything 🗺
- filter-anything ⚔️
- copy-anything 🎭
- case-anything 🐫
- flatten-anything 🏏
- nestify-anything 🧅
- If you pass an object, it will flatten all nested properties
- If you pass an array, it will flatten all nested arrays
import { flatten } from 'flatten-anything'
const target = { name: 'Ho-oh', types: { fire: true, flying: true } }
flatten(target)
// returns {
// name: 'Ho-oh',
// types.fire: true,
// types.flying: true
// }
Please note that when you pass an object it will only flatten nested object props, and do nothing to arrays inside the object.
import { flatten } from 'flatten-anything'
const target = [1, 2, ['a', 'b', ['y', 'z']], 3]
flatten(target)
// returns [1, 2, 'a', 'b', 'y', 'z', 3]
Please note that when you pass an array it will only flatten direct arrays, and do nothing to objects inside the array.
currently only works with objects. Please open an issue if you want it to work with arrays as well!
const target = {
name: 'Lugia',
appearence: {
// let's only flatten 1 level until here:
parts: { wings: true },
colors: { white: true, blue: true },
},
}
const untilDepth = 1
flatten(target, untilDepth)
// returns {
// name: 'Lugia',
// appearence.parts: { wings: true },
// appearence.colors: { white: true, blue: true },
// }
It's possible to only flatten eg. one prop.
import { flattenObjectProps } from 'flatten-anything'
const target = {
appearence: { hair: 'orange' },
traits: { strength: 9000 },
}
const propsToFlatten = ['traits']
flattenObjectProps(target, propsToFlatten)
// returns {
// appearence: { hair: 'orange' },
// traits.strength: 9000,
// }
You can also point to a nested object property to only flatten specific nested props, but keep the rest as an object!
const target = {
traits: {
strength: 9000,
range: { min: 8000, max: 10000 },
},
}
const propsToFlatten = ['traits.range']
// only flatten `traits.range` and nothing else.
flattenObjectProps(target, propsToFlatten)
// returns {
// traits: { strength: 9000 },
// 'traits.range': {min: 8000, max: 10000},
// }
Importing flatten
allows you to use it for both objects and arrays.
If you use webpack, rollup, etc. you can import less code by specifying the exact flatten function you need:
import { flattenObject } from 'flatten-anything'
// or
import { flattenArray } from 'flatten-anything'
const pokemon = {
name: 'Charizard',
types: { dark: true, fire: true, flying: true },
}
// we want to delete the `dark` type from this Pokemon
const payload = flatten({
types: { dark: Firebase.firestore.FieldValue.delete() },
})
Firebase.firestore()
.doc('pokemon/charizard')
.update(payload)