INPUT
[
{"Id":1,"text":"Welcome","question":"san","translation":"willkommen."},
{"Id":1,"text":"Welcome","question":"se","translation":"bienvenida"},
{"Id":1,"text":"Welcome","question":"fr","translation":"propriétaires"},
{"Id":1,"text":"ajax","question":"san","translation":"ommen."},
{"Id":1,"text":"ajax","question":"se","translation":"bienve"},
{"Id":1,"text":"ajax","question":"fr","translation":"propires"}
]
if question = san then all "san" objects will be inserted in array like and so on-
san:[{"text":"Welcome","question":"san","translation":"willkommen.},
{"text":"ajax","question":"san","translation":"ommen."},
se:[{"text":"Welcome","question":"se","translation":"bienvenida.},
{"text":"ajax","question":"se","translation":"bienve."},
fr:[{"text":"Welcome","question":"fr","translation":"propriétaires.},
{"text":"ajax","question":"fr","translation":"propires."},
Question is how do i check if question=san then make one array and insert all san values in it and so on without hardcoding the question property values.
Tried looping things but how to match without hardcoding because in future question attribute can change .
question="san" will be all together in an array "se" will be all together in an array and so on.
New to this not know much about nodejs.
Tried something like this but not coming as required way
fs.readFile('./data.json', 'utf8', function (err,data) {
data = JSON.parse(data);
var array = [];
for(var i = 0; i < data.length; i++) {
var lang = data[i].language;
for(var j= 0; j< data.length; j++) {
if(lang == data[j].language){
array.push(data[j].language);
array.push(data[j].translation);
array.push(data[j].text);
}
}
}
output Required
san:[{"text":"Welcome","question":"san","translation":"willkommen.},
{"text":"ajax","question":"san","translation":"ommen."},
se:[{"text":"Welcome","question":"se","translation":"bienvenida.},
{"text":"ajax","question":"se","translation":"bienve."},
fr:[{"text":"Welcome","question":"fr","translation":"propriétaires.},
{"text":"ajax","question":"fr","translation":"propires."},
I recommend you to use ES6 functions instead of for. You can separate the different processes and make the code more modular and declarative. This way you can change easily the desired output since your code is made by little pieces.
const data = [
{"Id":1,"text":"hi all present ","language":"sde","translation":"Hernjd ndjjsjdj"},
{"Id":1,"text":"hi all present","language":"ses","translation":"dfks kdfk kdfk"},
{"Id":1,"text":"hi all present","language":"sfr","translation":"bsh kkoweofeo"},
{"Id":1,"text":"hi all present","language":"szh","translation":"kdijo keow"},
{"Id":1,"text":"activated","language":"sde","translation":"Konto eid ke"},
{"Id":1,"text":"activated","language":"ses","translation":"La cueweffewfefwef."},
{"Id":1,"text":"activated","language":"sfr","translation":"Cowefrwef"},
{"Id":1,"text":"activated","language":"szh","translation":"fhewjhfwh"},
{"Id":1,"text":"completed","language":"sde","translation":"Ihr fwejiewf"},
{"Id":1,"text":"completed","language":"ses","translation":"Ya hfuwifrw"},
{"Id":1,"text":"completed","language":"sfr","translation":"Votrkwfwe"},
{"Id":1,"text":"completed","language":"szh","translation":"dmksfkwkf"},
{"Id":1,"text":"ACTION","language":"sde","translation":"AKTION"},
{"Id":1,"text":"ACTION","language":"ses","translation":"ACCIONES"},
{"Id":1,"text":"ACTION","language":"fr","translation":"ACTION"}];
// Define the properties that we want to filter for each element
const filterProperties = (item) => ({
text:item.text,
language: item.language,
translation:item.translation
})
// Given a type of languages ('sde'), filter the data in function of this value
const getItemsByLanguage = (language) => {
return data.filter((item) => item.language === language)
}
const onlyUnique = (value, index, self) => {
return self.indexOf(value) === index;
}
// Get the unique values of languages: ['sde', 'ses', 'sfr', ...]
const uniqueLanguages = data.map((item) => item.language).filter(onlyUnique)
// Get all found items for a language ('sde') and get the desired format (returns array of objects)
const resultArray = uniqueLanguages.map((language) => (
{[language]: getItemsByLanguage(language).map(filterProperties)}
))
// Convert the array of objects to single object
const result = Object.assign({}, ...resultArray)
console.log(result)
const data = [
{"Id":1,"text":"hi all present ","language":"sde","translation":"Hernjd ndjjs
jdj"},
{"Id":1,"text":"hi all present","language":"ses","translation":"dfks kdfk
kdfk"},
{"Id":1,"text":"hi all present","language":"sfr","translation":"bsh kkowe
ofeo"},
{"Id":1,"text":"hi all present","language":"szh","translation":"kdijo keow"},
{"Id":1,"text":"activated","language":"sde","translation":"Konto eid ke"},
{"Id":1,"text":"activated","language":"ses","translation":"La cueweffewfef
wef."},
{"Id":1,"text":"activated","language":"sfr","translation":"Cowefrwef"},
{"Id":1,"text":"activated","language":"szh","translation":"fhewjhfwh"},
{"Id":1,"text":"completed","language":"sde","translation":"Ihr fwejiewf"},
{"Id":1,"text":"completed","language":"ses","translation":"Ya hfuwifrw"},
{"Id":1,"text":"completed","language":"sfr","translation":"Votrkwfwe"},
{"Id":1,"text":"completed","language":"szh","translation":"dmksfkwkf"},
{"Id":1,"text":"ACTION","language":"sde","translation":"AKTION"},
{"Id":1,"text":"ACTION","language":"ses","translation":"ACCIONES"},
{"Id":1,"text":"ACTION","language":"fr","translation":"ACTION"}];
// Define the properties that we want to filter for each element
const filterProperties = (data) => ({
text:data.text,
question: data.question,
translation:data.translation
})
// Given a type of question ('san'), filter the data in function of this value
const getQuestions = (question) => {
return data.filter((item) => item.question === question)
}
const onlyUnique = (value, index, self) => {
return self.indexOf(value) === index;
}
// Get the unique values of questions: ['san', 'se', 'fr']
const uniqueQuestions = data.map((item) => item.question).filter(onlyUnique)
// Get all found values for a question and get the desired format (returns
array of objects)
const resultArray = uniqueQuestions.map((question) => (
{[question]: getQuestions(question).map(filterProperties)}
))
// Convert the array of objects to single object
const result = Object.assign({}, ...resultArray)
console.log(result)
How can I export nested tree data as a CSV file when using Tabulator? I tried using the table.download("csv","data.csv") function, however, only the top-level data rows are exported.
It looks like a custom file formatter or another option may be necessary to achieve this. It seems silly to re-write the CSV downloader, so while poking around the csv downloader in the download.js module, it looks like maybe adding a recursive function to the row parser upon finding a "_children" field might work.
I am having difficulty figuring out where to get started.
Ultimately, I need to have the parent-to-child relationship represented in the CSV data with a value in a parent ID field in the child rows (this field can be blank in the top-level parent rows because they have no parent). I think I would need to include an ID and ParentID in the data table to achieve this, and perhaps enforce the validation of that key using some additional functions as data is inserted into the table.
Below is currently how I am exporting nested data tables to CSV. This will insert a new column at the end to include a parent row identifier of your choice. It would be easy to take that out or make it conditional if you do not need it.
// Export CSV file to download
$("#export-csv").click(function(){
table.download(dataTreeCSVfileFormatter, "data.csv",{nested:true, nestedParentTitle:"Parent Name", nestedParentField:"name"});
});
// Modified CSV file formatter for nested data trees
// This is a copy of the CSV formatter in modules/download.js
// with additions to recursively loop through children arrays and add a Parent identifier column
// options: nested:true, nestedParentTitle:"Parent Name", nestedParentField:"name"
var dataTreeCSVfileFormatter = function(columns, data, options, setFileContents, config){
//columns - column definition array for table (with columns in current visible order);
//data - currently displayed table data
//options - the options object passed from the download function
//setFileContents - function to call to pass the formatted data to the downloader
var self = this,
titles = [],
fields = [],
delimiter = options && options.delimiter ? options.delimiter : ",",
nestedParentTitle = options && options.nestedParentTitle ? options.nestedParentTitle : "Parent",
nestedParentField = options && options.nestedParentField ? options.nestedParentField : "id",
fileContents,
output;
//build column headers
function parseSimpleTitles() {
columns.forEach(function (column) {
titles.push('"' + String(column.title).split('"').join('""') + '"');
fields.push(column.field);
});
if(options.nested) {
titles.push('"' + String(nestedParentTitle) + '"');
}
}
function parseColumnGroup(column, level) {
if (column.subGroups) {
column.subGroups.forEach(function (subGroup) {
parseColumnGroup(subGroup, level + 1);
});
} else {
titles.push('"' + String(column.title).split('"').join('""') + '"');
fields.push(column.definition.field);
}
}
if (config.columnGroups) {
console.warn("Download Warning - CSV downloader cannot process column groups");
columns.forEach(function (column) {
parseColumnGroup(column, 0);
});
} else {
parseSimpleTitles();
}
//generate header row
fileContents = [titles.join(delimiter)];
function parseRows(data,parentValue="") {
//generate each row of the table
data.forEach(function (row) {
var rowData = [];
fields.forEach(function (field) {
var value = self.getFieldValue(field, row);
switch (typeof value === "undefined" ? "undefined" : _typeof(value)) {
case "object":
value = JSON.stringify(value);
break;
case "undefined":
case "null":
value = "";
break;
default:
value = value;
}
//escape quotation marks
rowData.push('"' + String(value).split('"').join('""') + '"');
});
if(options.nested) {
rowData.push('"' + String(parentValue).split('"').join('""') + '"');
}
fileContents.push(rowData.join(delimiter));
if(options.nested) {
if(row._children) {
parseRows(row._children, self.getFieldValue(nestedParentField, row));
}
}
});
}
function parseGroup(group) {
if (group.subGroups) {
group.subGroups.forEach(function (subGroup) {
parseGroup(subGroup);
});
} else {
parseRows(group.rows);
}
}
if (config.columnCalcs) {
console.warn("Download Warning - CSV downloader cannot process column calculations");
data = data.data;
}
if (config.rowGroups) {
console.warn("Download Warning - CSV downloader cannot process row groups");
data.forEach(function (group) {
parseGroup(group);
});
} else {
parseRows(data);
}
output = fileContents.join("\n");
if (options.bom) {
output = "\uFEFF" + output;
}
setFileContents(output, "text/csv");
};
as of version 4.2 it is currently not possible to include tree data in downloads, this will be comming in a later release
I am trying to find a way to iterate all objects from a large collection of data in Firebase Database.
My best attempt follows but I found it odd for several reasons:
startAt() values are always inclusive. So after fetching 100 elements, I had to use my last fetched key as an argument to startAt which results in the last item being fetched again
DataSnapshot's forEach method doesn't allow a callback with an index count as you would think it would based on JS's standards so I had to create a manual index - not sure it will work in every case as i'm not sure if forEach works perfectly synchronously
Here is my code, given the assumption my collection is located at users.
const mapAllTripsPaginated = function (database, childSnapshotCallback, start = '', limit = 100, totalNb = 0) {
return database.ref('/users').orderByKey().startAt(start).limitToFirst(limit).once('value').then((snapshot) => {
let childrenPromises = []
let lastChildKey = null
let idx = 0
snapshot.forEach((childSnapshot) => {
lastChildKey = childSnapshot.key
if (start !== '' && idx === 0) {
// console.log(`Skipping ${childSnapshot.key} as 1st element of page`)
} else {
childrenPromises.push(childSnapshotCallback(childSnapshot))
}
idx = idx + 1
})
return Promise.all(childrenPromises)
.then((result) => {
let newTotal = totalNb + result.length
if (snapshot.numChildren() === limit) {
console.log(`Paginating from ${lastChildKey}`)
return mapAllTripsPaginated(database, childSnapshotCallback, start = lastChildKey, limit = limit, totalNb = newTotal)
} else {
// Done paginating
return newTotal
}
})
})
}
Any idea on how I could make this method more elegant?
Firebase queries are inclusive both for their start and end conditions. You will indeed have to deduplicate the overlapping item on the client.
Firebase's Snapshot.forEach() is a synchronous operation.
I'd normally deduplicate based on already having the key of the item. That will also remove the need for the idx counter.
snapshot.forEach((childSnapshot) => {
if (lastChildKey !== childSnapshot.key) {
childrenPromises.push(childSnapshotCallback(childSnapshot))
}
lastChildKey = childSnapshot.key
})
I'm relatively new to js and now have to implement a handsontable into our project.
This worked well so far, but I am hitting a roadblock with globalization.
Basically, we use comma as a decimal seperator, but when I try and copy something like "100,2" into a cell designated as 'numeric,' it will show as 1002.
If the same value is entered in a cell designated as 'text' and the type is changed to numeric afterwards, the value will be shown correctly.
For this I already had to add 'de' culture to the table sourcecode.(basically copying 'en' and changing the values currently relevant to me.)
numeral.language('de', {
delimiters: {
thousands: '.',
decimal: ','
},//other non-relevant stuff here
When I copy the values directly from the table and insert them to np++ they show as 100.2 etc. However, when inserting them into handsontable the arguments-array looks as follows:
[Array[1], "paste", undefined, undefined, undefined, undefined]
0: Array[4]
0: 1 //row
1: 1 //column
2: "100.2" //previous value
3: 1002 //new value
Here's what I have tried currently:
hot.addHook("beforeChange", function () {
if (arguments[1] === "paste") {
hot.updateSettings({
cells: function (row, col, prop) {
var cellProperties = {
type: 'numeric',
language: 'en'
};
return cellProperties;
}
});
//hot.updateSettings({
// cells: function (row, col, prop) {
// var cellProperties = {
// type: 'text',
// };
// return cellProperties;
// }
//});
}
}, hot);
hot.addHook("afterChange", function () {
if (arguments[1] === "paste") {
ChangeMatrixSettings(); //reset cell properties of whole table
}
}, hot);
I hope I've made my problem clear enough, not sure if I missed something.
Are there any other ways to get the correct values back into the table? Is this currently not possible?
Thanks in advance.
You asked more than one thing, but let me see if I can help you.
As explained in handsontable numeric documentation, you can define a format of the cell. If you want '100,2' to be shown you would format as follows
format: '0.,'
You can change that to what you really need, like if you are looking for money value you could do something like
format: '0,0.00 $'
The other thing you asked about is not on the latest release, but you can check it out how it would work here
I have since implemented my own validation of input, due to other requirements we have for the table mainly in regards to showing invalid input to user.
function validateInputForNumeric(parameter) {
var value = parameter[3];
var row = parameter[0];
var col = parameter[1];
if (decimalSeperator === '') {
var tmpculture = getCurrCulture();
}
if (value !== null && value !== "") {
if (!value.match('([a-zA-Z])')) {
if (value.indexOf(thousandSeperator) !== -1) {
value = removeAndReplaceLast(value, thousandSeperator, ''); //Thousandseperators will be ignored
}
if (value.indexOf('.') !== -1 && decimalSeperator !== '.') {
//Since numeric variables are handled as '12.3' this will customize the variables to fit with the current culture
value = removeAndReplaceLast(value, '.', decimalSeperator);
}
//Add decimalseperator if string does not contain one
if (numDecimalPlaces > 0 && value.indexOf(decimalSeperator) === -1) {
value += decimalSeperator;
}
var index = value.indexOf(decimalSeperator)
var zerosToAdd = numDecimalPlaces - (value.length - index - 1);
for (var j = 0; j < zerosToAdd; j++) {
//Add zeros until numberOfDecimalPlaces is matched for uniformity in display values
value += '0';
}
if (index !== -1) {
if (numDecimalPlaces === 0) {
//Remove decimalseperator when there are no decimal places
value = value.substring(0, index)
} else {
//Cut values that have to many decimalplaces
value = value.substring(0, index + 1 + numDecimalPlaces);
}
}
if (ErrorsInTable.indexOf([row, col]) !== -1) {
RemoveCellFromErrorList(row, col);
}
} else {
AddCellToErrorList(row, col);
}
}
//console.log("r:" + row + " c:" + col + " v:" + value);
return value;
}
The inputParameter is an array, due to handsontable hooks using arrays for edit-events. parameter[2] is the old value, should this be needed at any point.
This code works reasonably fast even when copying 2k records from Excel (2s-4s).
One of my main hindrances regarding execution speed was me using the handsontable .getDataAtCell and .setDataAtCell methods to check. These don't seem to handle large tables very well ( not a critique, just an observation ). This was fixed by iterating through the data via .getData method.
From the following code I am getting the appropriate output, but I want the data to come in sorted form i.e the most recent data must come on top. The data must be sorted in descending order according to the difference of current date and 'win_date'.I am new to node.js..earlier in PHP I used to do this by using function array_multisort. Can someone suggest the alternative to do the same in nodejs.
var post=[];
var sql2 ="SELECT `post_id`, `user_id`, `post`, `votes_count`, `win_date` FROM `tb_winning_posts` WHERE `group_id`=?";
connection.query(sql2,[groupId],function(err, result) {
});
for(var i=0;i<result.length;i++)
{
var timeDiff = getTimeDifference(result[i].win_date); //returns diff of cur date & given date in day,hour,min
post.push({"post_id":result[i].post_id,"post":result[i].post,"votes":result[i].votes_count,"date":timeDiff});
}
console.log(post); //getting the data in order as stored in database
Based on the answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/8837511/1903116
post.sort(function(a, b){
var keyA = a.date, keyB = b.date;
if(keyA < keyB) return 1;
if(keyA > keyB) return -1;
return 0;
});
console.log (post);