$ npm install base-option
Adds a few options methods to base, like
option
,enable
anddisable
. See the readme for the full API.
Install with npm:
$ npm install --save base-option
Use as a plugin with with your base
application:
var Base = require('base');
var options = require('base-option');
var base = new Base();
base.use(options()); // plugin
// set an option
app.option('a', 'b');
// set a nested property
app.option('x.y', 'z');
// get an option
console.log(app.option('x'));
//=> {y: 'z'}
Set or get an option.
Params
key
{String}: The option name.value
{any}: The value to set.returns
{any}: Returns a value
when only key
is defined.Example
app.option('a', true);
app.option('a');
//=> true
Return true if options.hasOwnProperty(key)
Params
prop
{String}returns
{Boolean}: True if prop
exists.Example
app.hasOption('a');
//=> false
app.option('a', 'b');
app.hasOption('a');
//=> true
Enable key
.
Params
key
{String}returns
{Object} Options
: to enable chainingExample
app.enable('a');
Disable key
.
Params
key
{String}: The option to disable.returns
{Object} Options
: to enable chainingExample
app.disable('a');
Check if prop
is enabled (truthy).
Params
prop
{String}returns
{Boolean}Example
app.enabled('a');
//=> false
app.enable('a');
app.enabled('a');
//=> true
Check if prop
is disabled (falsey).
Params
prop
{String}returns
{Boolean}: Returns true if prop
is disabled.Example
app.disabled('a');
//=> true
app.enable('a');
app.disabled('a');
//=> false
Returns true if the value of prop
is strictly true
.
Params
prop
{String}returns
{Boolean}: Uses strict equality for comparison.Example
app.option('a', 'b');
app.isTrue('a');
//=> false
app.option('c', true);
app.isTrue('c');
//=> true
app.option({a: {b: {c: true}}});
app.isTrue('a.b.c');
//=> true
Returns true if the value of key
is strictly false
.
Params
prop
{String}returns
{Boolean}: Uses strict equality for comparison.Example
app.option('a', null);
app.isFalse('a');
//=> false
app.option('c', false);
app.isFalse('c');
//=> true
app.option({a: {b: {c: false}}});
app.isFalse('a.b.c');
//=> true
Return true if the value of key is either true
or false
.
Params
key
{String}returns
{Boolean}: True if true
or false
.Example
app.option('a', 'b');
app.isBoolean('a');
//=> false
app.option('c', true);
app.isBoolean('c');
//=> true
Set option key
on app.options
with the given value
Params
key
{String}: Option key, dot-notation may be used.value
{any}Example
app.option.set('a', 'b');
console.log(app.option.get('a'));
//=> 'b'
Get option key
from app.options
Params
key
{String}: Option key, dot-notation may be used.returns
{any}Example
app.option({a: 'b'});
console.log(app.option.get('a'));
//=> 'b'
Returns a shallow clone of app.options
with all of the options methods, as well as a .merge
method for merging options onto the cloned object.
Params
options
{Options}: Object to merge onto the returned options object.returns
{Object}Example
var opts = app.option.create();
opts.merge({foo: 'bar'});
data
method to base-methods. | homepagePull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, please create an issue.
Commits | Contributor |
---|---|
64 | jonschlinkert |
4 | doowb |
(This project's readme.md is generated by verb, please don't edit the readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in the .verb.md readme template.)
To generate the readme, run the following command:
$ npm install -g verbose/verb#dev verb-generate-readme && verb
Running and reviewing unit tests is a great way to get familiarized with a library and its API. You can install dependencies and run tests with the following command:
$ npm install && npm test
Jon Schlinkert
Copyright © 2017, Jon Schlinkert. Released under the MIT License.
This file was generated by verb-generate-readme, v0.6.0, on May 30, 2017.
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