X-Git-Url: http://www.aleph1.co.uk/gitweb/?p=yaffs-website;a=blobdiff_plain;f=node_modules%2Fconcat-stream%2Freadme.md;fp=node_modules%2Fconcat-stream%2Freadme.md;h=69234d52a535bb8c731d2eb3c8de24b472e533db;hp=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000;hb=a2bd1bf0c2c1f1a17d188f4dc0726a45494cefae;hpb=57c063afa3f66b07c4bbddc2d6129a96d90f0aad diff --git a/node_modules/concat-stream/readme.md b/node_modules/concat-stream/readme.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..69234d52a --- /dev/null +++ b/node_modules/concat-stream/readme.md @@ -0,0 +1,94 @@ +# concat-stream + +Writable stream that concatenates strings or binary data and calls a callback with the result. Not a transform stream -- more of a stream sink. + +[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/maxogden/concat-stream.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/maxogden/concat-stream) + +[![NPM](https://nodei.co/npm/concat-stream.png)](https://nodei.co/npm/concat-stream/) + +### description + +Streams emit many buffers. If you want to collect all of the buffers, and when the stream ends concatenate all of the buffers together and receive a single buffer then this is the module for you. + +Only use this if you know you can fit all of the output of your stream into a single Buffer (e.g. in RAM). + +There are also `objectMode` streams that emit things other than Buffers, and you can concatenate these too. See below for details. + +### examples + +#### Buffers + +```js +var fs = require('fs') +var concat = require('concat-stream') + +var readStream = fs.createReadStream('cat.png') +var concatStream = concat(gotPicture) + +readStream.on('error', handleError) +readStream.pipe(concatStream) + +function gotPicture(imageBuffer) { + // imageBuffer is all of `cat.png` as a node.js Buffer +} + +function handleError(err) { + // handle your error appropriately here, e.g.: + console.error(err) // print the error to STDERR + process.exit(1) // exit program with non-zero exit code +} + +``` + +#### Arrays + +```js +var write = concat(function(data) {}) +write.write([1,2,3]) +write.write([4,5,6]) +write.end() +// data will be [1,2,3,4,5,6] in the above callback +``` + +#### Uint8Arrays + +```js +var write = concat(function(data) {}) +var a = new Uint8Array(3) +a[0] = 97; a[1] = 98; a[2] = 99 +write.write(a) +write.write('!') +write.end(Buffer('!!1')) +``` + +See `test/` for more examples + +# methods + +```js +var concat = require('concat-stream') +``` + +## var writable = concat(opts={}, cb) + +Return a `writable` stream that will fire `cb(data)` with all of the data that +was written to the stream. Data can be written to `writable` as strings, +Buffers, arrays of byte integers, and Uint8Arrays. + +By default `concat-stream` will give you back the same data type as the type of the first buffer written to the stream. Use `opts.encoding` to set what format `data` should be returned as, e.g. if you if you don't want to rely on the built-in type checking or for some other reason. + +* `string` - get a string +* `buffer` - get back a Buffer +* `array` - get an array of byte integers +* `uint8array`, `u8`, `uint8` - get back a Uint8Array +* `object`, get back an array of Objects + +If you don't specify an encoding, and the types can't be inferred (e.g. you write things that aren't in the list above), it will try to convert concat them into a `Buffer`. + +# error handling + +`concat-stream` does not handle errors for you, so you must handle errors on whatever streams you pipe into `concat-stream`. This is a general rule when programming with node.js streams: always handle errors on each and every stream. Since `concat-stream` is not itself a stream it does not emit errors. + +# license + +MIT LICENSE