Call function with any order of arguments.
Anyorder
could be used when order of parameters need to be other then it is. It's not very common situation, but sometimes it could be useful.
For example to avoid boolean trap in addEventListener
.
In node.js
:
const anyorder = require('anyorder');
const fs = require('fs');
const read = anyorder('function, string', fs.readFile);
read((error, data) => {
console.log(error || data)
}, 'README.md');
In browser
:
const addListener = window.addEventListener.bind(window);
const add = anyorder('string, function, boolean', addListener);
add('load', true, (event) => {
console.log(event);
});
In old node.js
environments that supports es5
only, anyorder
could be used with:
var anyorder = require('anyorder/legacy');
MIT