andrewplummer

Sugar

A Javascript library for working with native objects.
Under MIT License
By andrewplummer

javascript polyfill sugar native-objects utility-library

Sugar



A Javascript library for working with native objects.

v2.0.4
sugar.js | sugar.min.js (24kb gz)
Install
npm install sugar
bower install sugar
Upgrading

If you are upgrading from v1, there is now an upgrade helper script
available that makes upgrading easier by warning you about breaking changes as
your code is run. The CAUTIONLOG is also available, which is a
vetted changelog showing breaking changes in order of severity.


Getting Started
https://sugarjs.com/quickstart/
Documentation
https://sugarjs.com/docs/
Custom Builds
https://sugarjs.com/download/

Custom browser builds can be created on the site download page. In addition,
tools like Browserify can also be used to create custom builds, as npm packages
are now fully modular. The main repo also has tasks to create custom builds as
well. Simply clone, run npm install then gulp.


Browser

The dist directory holds builds that are ready to be loaded in the browser.
These builds include the core module, and so have no dependencies. Bower
packages at the moment include only this directory. Use the es5 builds if you
require support for environments that do not support ES5 natively (IE8 and below).


npm

The sugar npm package allows methods as well as entire modules to be required
individually. If you are using a build tool like Browserify, this will make it
simple to create smaller custom builds without going through the download page.
All packages also include pre-built distributions in the dist/ directory.


In addition to the main sugar package, there are also packages separated by
Sugar module, i.e. sugar-date, sugar-array, etc.


When an entry point is required (the package name or an entire module), it will
return a reference to Sugar, which is equivalent to the global object in the
browser. All methods will be defined on this object and can be called as normal.
Requiring an individual method will define it on Sugar and additionally return
a reference to its static form that can be called immediately:


```javascript
// Require all modules
var Sugar = require('sugar');
Sugar.Number.round(3.1415);


// Require the Number module
var Sugar = require('sugar/number');
Sugar.Number.round(3.1415);


// Require only the "round" method
var round = require('sugar/number/round');
round(3.1415);
```


As the npm package is designed with node in mind, polyfills must be explicitly
required (the sugar entry point will not include them), and will immediately
apply themselves if the methods they polyfill are missing.


javascript
// Require and apply ES6 polyfills
require('sugar/polyfills/es6');


Similarly, date locales must be explicitly required as well:
javascript
// Require the Japanese date locale
require('sugar/locales/ja');
// Require all date locales
require('sugar/locales');


All Sugar npm packages are dependent on the sugar-core package.


Modules

Although Sugar builds can now be customized at method level, modules are still
used as an intuitive way of grouping similar methods. Sugar npm packages make
use of modules, both in the main sugar package as well as individual module
packages beginning with sugar-. The following modules are available:


Default:

Non-default:

Non-default modules are excluded from the main Sugar build, but can be added by
creating a custom build. The main npm package includes the ES5
module, polyfills are disabled by default and must be explicitly required.
Other non-default modules can be found individually (i.e. sugar-language, etc).


Date Locales

Locale definition files are in the locales directory. They can be
simply included as-is after Sugar is loaded, or built together using
custom builds. English is included by default and required by
the Date module. Currently available locales are:



Adding/Customizing Locales

If a locale or format is missing, it can easily be added by modifying or adding
the definition. See here for more on
this. Please consider contributing any changes made back to the community!


Timezones

Sugar does not deal with timezone abbreviations (i.e. "PST", etc). Timezone
offsets will be correctly parsed if they are in ISO-8601 format (+09:00, +0900,
or Z for UTC), however if an abbreviation exists it will be ignored. Sugar
however plays nicely with other libraries that offer full timezone support such
as timezone.js.


Date.create allows two options for dealing with UTC dates. fromUTC will
parse the string as UTC, but return a normal date. In contrast, setUTC tells
Sugar to use methods like getUTCHours when handling the date, and is usually
used when the date needs to be formatted as UTC. Native methods like getHours
still return local values.


Defining Methods

Sugar now makes it easy to define your own methods. This is aimed at developers
hoping to release their own plugins with Sugar. After defining methods, they can
be extended or used as chainables just like other methods:


```javascript
Sugar.Number.defineStatic('randomish', function () {
if (Math.random() > .5) {
return Math.random();
} else {
return 1;
}
});


Sugar.Number.defineInstance({
'square': function (n) {
return n * n;
},
'cube': function (n) {
return n * n * n;
}
});


Sugar.Number.square(3); // 9
new Sugar.Number(5).cube().raw; // 125
Sugar.Number.randomish() // ???


Sugar.extend();
(2).square(); // 4
(4).cube(); // 64
Number.randomish(); // ???


```


See the docs for options and other helpers.


Plugins

If you are defining methods that are useful to the general public, please consider
releasing them as a Sugar plugin! Refer to the
plugin boilerplate
repo for an example to get started.


Contributing

If you would like to issue a pull request, please first consider adding well
formed unit tests. These tests can be run directly in the browser
from the test/browser/ directory or in node with npm test.


Road Map

Proposals for core features or major method changes will be added to the
road map. New methods
may or may not be accepted, depending on their utility. Generally, they will
first be delegated to plugins that may eventually be added to the main library
when they reach a certain stage of popularity.