Skip to content

slim16165/plugin-load-filter-wordpress

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

40 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

plugin-load-filter-wordpress

YaLinqo: Yet Another LINQ to Objects for PHP

Scrutinizer Code Quality Build Status Code Intelligence Status

Features

  • The most complete port of .NET LINQ to PHP, with many additional methods.
  • Lazy evaluation, error messages and other behavior of original LINQ.
  • Detailed PHPDoc and online reference based on PHPDoc for all methods. Articles are adapted from original LINQ documentation from MSDN.
  • 100% unit test coverage.
  • Best performance among full-featured LINQ ports (YaLinqo, Ginq, Pinq), at least 2x faster than the closest competitor, see performance tests.
  • Callback functions can be specified as closures (like function ($v) { return $v; }), PHP "function pointers" (either strings like 'strnatcmp' or arrays like array($object, 'methodName')), string "lambdas" using various syntaxes ('"$k = $v"', '$v ==> $v+1', '($v, $k) ==> $v + $k', '($v, $k) ==> { return $v + $k; }').
  • Keys are as important as values. Most callback functions receive both values and the keys; transformations can be applied to both values and the keys; keys are never lost during transformations, if possible.
  • SPL interfaces Iterator, IteratorAggregate etc. are used throughout the code and can be used interchangeably with Enumerable.
  • Redundant collection classes are avoided, native PHP arrays are used everywhere.
  • Composer support (package on Packagist).
  • No external dependencies.

Implemented methods

Some methods had to be renamed, because their names are reserved keywords. Original methods names are given in parenthesis.

  • Generation: cycle, emptyEnum (empty), from, generate, toInfinity, toNegativeInfinity, matches, returnEnum (return), range, rangeDown, rangeTo, repeat, split;
  • Projection and filtering: cast, ofType, select, selectMany, where;
  • Ordering: orderBy, orderByDescending, orderByDir, thenBy, thenByDescending, thenByDir;
  • Joining and grouping: groupJoin, join, groupBy;
  • Aggregation: aggregate, aggregateOrDefault, average, count, max, maxBy, min, minBy, sum;
  • Set: all, any, append, concat, contains, distinct, except, intersect, prepend, union;
  • Pagination: elementAt, elementAtOrDefault, first, firstOrDefault, firstOrFallback, last, lastOrDefault, lastOrFallback, single, singleOrDefault, singleOrFallback, indexOf, lastIndexOf, findIndex, findLastIndex, skip, skipWhile, take, takeWhile;
  • Conversion: toArray, toArrayDeep, toList, toListDeep, toDictionary, toJSON, toLookup, toKeys, toValues, toObject, toString;
  • Actions: call (do), each (forEach), write, writeLine.

In total, more than 80 methods.

Example

Process sample data:

// Data
$products = array(
    array('name' => 'Keyboard',    'catId' => 'hw', 'quantity' =>  10, 'id' => 1),
    array('name' => 'Mouse',       'catId' => 'hw', 'quantity' =>  20, 'id' => 2),
    array('name' => 'Monitor',     'catId' => 'hw', 'quantity' =>   0, 'id' => 3),
    array('name' => 'Joystick',    'catId' => 'hw', 'quantity' =>  15, 'id' => 4),
    array('name' => 'CPU',         'catId' => 'hw', 'quantity' =>  15, 'id' => 5),
    array('name' => 'Motherboard', 'catId' => 'hw', 'quantity' =>  11, 'id' => 6),
    array('name' => 'Windows',     'catId' => 'os', 'quantity' => 666, 'id' => 7),
    array('name' => 'Linux',       'catId' => 'os', 'quantity' => 666, 'id' => 8),
    array('name' => 'Mac',         'catId' => 'os', 'quantity' => 666, 'id' => 9),
);
$categories = array(
    array('name' => 'Hardware',          'id' => 'hw'),
    array('name' => 'Operating systems', 'id' => 'os'),
);

// Put products with non-zero quantity into matching categories;
// sort categories by name;
// sort products within categories by quantity descending, then by name.
$result = from($categories)
    ->orderBy('$cat ==> $cat["name"]')
    ->groupJoin(
        from($products)
            ->where('$prod ==> $prod["quantity"] > 0')
            ->orderByDescending('$prod ==> $prod["quantity"]')
            ->thenBy('$prod ==> $prod["name"]'),
        '$cat ==> $cat["id"]', '$prod ==> $prod["catId"]',
        '($cat, $prods) ==> array(
            "name" => $cat["name"],
            "products" => $prods
        )'
    );

// Alternative shorter syntax using default variable names
$result2 = from($categories)
    ->orderBy('$v["name"]')
    ->groupJoin(
        from($products)
            ->where('$v["quantity"] > 0')
            ->orderByDescending('$v["quantity"]')
            ->thenBy('$v["name"]'),
        '$v["id"]', '$v["catId"]',
        'array(
            "name" => $v["name"],
            "products" => $e
        )'
    );

// Closure syntax, maximum support in IDEs, but verbose and hard to read
$result3 = from($categories)
    ->orderBy(function ($cat) { return $cat['name']; })
    ->groupJoin(
        from($products)
            ->where(function ($prod) { return $prod["quantity"] > 0; })
            ->orderByDescending(function ($prod) { return $prod["quantity"]; })
            ->thenBy(function ($prod) { return $prod["name"]; }),
        function ($cat) { return $cat["id"]; },
        function ($prod) { return $prod["catId"]; },
        function ($cat, $prods) {
            return array(
                "name" => $cat["name"],
                "products" => $prods
            );
        }
    );

print_r($result->toArrayDeep());

Output (compacted):

Array (
    [hw] => Array (
        [name] => Hardware
        [products] => Array (
            [0] => Array ( [name] => Mouse       [catId] => hw [quantity] =>  20 [id] => 2 )
            [1] => Array ( [name] => CPU         [catId] => hw [quantity] =>  15 [id] => 5 )
            [2] => Array ( [name] => Joystick    [catId] => hw [quantity] =>  15 [id] => 4 )
            [3] => Array ( [name] => Motherboard [catId] => hw [quantity] =>  11 [id] => 6 )
            [4] => Array ( [name] => Keyboard    [catId] => hw [quantity] =>  10 [id] => 1 )
        )
    )
    [os] => Array (
        [name] => Operating systems
        [products] => Array (
            [0] => Array ( [name] => Linux       [catId] => os [quantity] => 666 [id] => 8 )
            [1] => Array ( [name] => Mac         [catId] => os [quantity] => 666 [id] => 9 )
            [2] => Array ( [name] => Windows     [catId] => os [quantity] => 666 [id] => 7 )
        )
    )
)

Requirements

  • Version 1 (stable): PHP 5.3 or higher.
  • Version 2 (stable): PHP 5.5 or higher.
  • Version 3 (pre-alpha): PHP 7.0 or higher.

Usage

Add to composer.json:

{
    "require": {
        "athari/yalinqo": "^2.0"
    }
}

Add to your PHP script:

require_once 'vendor/autoloader.php';
use \YaLinqo\Enumerable;

// 'from' can be called as a static method or via a global function shortcut
Enumerable::from(array(1, 2, 3));
from(array(1, 2, 3));

License

All rights reserved.

Links

YaLinqo Articles

Related projects

  • linq.js — LINQ for JavaScript. The one and only complete port of .NET LINQ to JavaScript.
  • Underscore.js — library for functional programming in JavaScript. Similar to LINQ, but different method names and no lazy evaluation.
  • Underscore.php — port of Underscore.js to PHP.
  • RxPHP — reactive (push) counterpart of the active (pull) LINQ, port of Rx.NET.
  • YaLinqoPerf — collection of performance tests comparing raw PHP, array functions, YaLinqo, YaLinqo with string lambdas, Ginq, Ginq with property accessors, Pinq.

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages