Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
294 lines (181 loc) · 9.64 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

294 lines (181 loc) · 9.64 KB
About stdlib...

We believe in a future in which the web is a preferred environment for numerical computation. To help realize this future, we've built stdlib. stdlib is a standard library, with an emphasis on numerical and scientific computation, written in JavaScript (and C) for execution in browsers and in Node.js.

The library is fully decomposable, being architected in such a way that you can swap out and mix and match APIs and functionality to cater to your exact preferences and use cases.

When you use stdlib, you can be absolutely certain that you are using the most thorough, rigorous, well-written, studied, documented, tested, measured, and high-quality code out there.

To join us in bringing numerical computing to the web, get started by checking us out on GitHub, and please consider financially supporting stdlib. We greatly appreciate your continued support!

shift

NPM version Build Status Coverage Status

Remove and return the first element of a collection.

Usage

To use in Observable,

shift = require( 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/stdlib-js/utils-shift@umd/browser.js' )

To vendor stdlib functionality and avoid installing dependency trees for Node.js, you can use the UMD server build:

var shift = require( 'path/to/vendor/umd/utils-shift/index.js' )

To include the bundle in a webpage,

<script type="text/javascript" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/stdlib-js/utils-shift@umd/browser.js"></script>

If no recognized module system is present, access bundle contents via the global scope:

<script type="text/javascript">
(function () {
    window.shift;
})();
</script>

shift( collection )

Removes and returns the first element of a collection. A collection may be either an Array, Typed Array, or an array-like Object (i.e., an Object having a valid writable length property).

var arr = [ 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0 ];

var out = shift( arr );
// returns [ [ 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0 ], 1.0 ]

var bool = ( out[ 0 ] === arr );
// returns true

var lastValue = out[ 1 ];
// returns 1.0

In contrast to Array.prototype.shift which returns only the removed element, the function also returns the shortened collection. For typed arrays having a length greater than 0, the returned collection is a new typed array view.

var Float64Array = require( '@stdlib/array-float64' );

var arr = new Float64Array( 2 );
arr[ 0 ] = 1.0;
arr[ 1 ] = 2.0;

var out = shift( arr );
// returns [ <Float64Array>[ 2.0 ], 1.0 ]

var bool = ( out[ 0 ] === arr );
// returns false

bool = ( out[ 0 ].buffer === arr.buffer );
// returns true

var lastValue = out[ 1 ];
// returns 1.0

Notes

  • When provided a typed array, the function does not change the underlying ArrayBuffer. The function returns a new typed array view whose length is one less than the input typed array length. Accordingly, the function does not reduce the memory footprint of an input typed array.

Examples

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<body>
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/stdlib-js/array-float64@umd/browser.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/stdlib-js/utils-shift@umd/browser.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
(function () {

var arr;
var out;
var i;

arr = new Float64Array( 100 );
for ( i = 0; i < 100; i++ ) {
    out = shift( arr );
    arr = out[ 0 ];
    console.log( 'Length: %d', arr.length );
}
console.log( arr );

})();
</script>
</body>
</html>

See Also


Notice

This package is part of stdlib, a standard library for JavaScript and Node.js, with an emphasis on numerical and scientific computing. The library provides a collection of robust, high performance libraries for mathematics, statistics, streams, utilities, and more.

For more information on the project, filing bug reports and feature requests, and guidance on how to develop stdlib, see the main project repository.

Community

Chat


License

See LICENSE.

Copyright

Copyright © 2016-2024. The Stdlib Authors.