tags: dev title: Filter Operators type: text/vnd.tiddlywiki ! Overview Filter operators are modules (tiddlers of type `application/javascript`) with their `module-type` field set to `filteroperator`, exporting one or more functions implementing a filter. Each function will be called with three arguments: * A [[tiddler iterator|Tiddler Iterators]] representing the results of the previous filter step (or all tiddlers, if this filter appears first in an expression), conventionally named `source`. * An object, conventionally called `operator`, representing the arguments for this filter step, with the following keys: ** //operator//: the name of the filter operator specified in the WikiText; ** //operand//: the operand for the filter step (as a string; if the filter specified it in angle brackets or braces, the text reference or variable name will have already been resolved); ** //prefix//: (optional) a string containing a single exclamation mark if the filter operator is to be negated; ** //suffix//: (optional) a string containing an additional filter argument (typically a tiddler field name) following the filter name (separated by a colon in the filter syntax); ** //regexp//: (optional, deprecated) used instead of //operand// if the filter operand is a regexp. * An object, conventionally called `options`, with the following keys: ** //wiki//: The `$tw.Wiki` object; ** //widget//: (optional) a widget node. The function should return either a new [[tiddler iterator|Tiddler Iterators]], or else an array of tiddler titles (as strings). The underlying filter mechanism will convert back and forth between iterators and arrays as needed. ! References There are several filter operators built into the core which can serve as a jumping off point for your own filter operators: https://github.com/Jermolene/TiddlyWiki5/tree/master/core/modules/filters ! Example Suppose we want to make a filter operator that returns every other tiddler from the input list. A typical invocation might look like `[tags[interesting]everyother[]]`. We make a new tiddler, set its `type` and `module-type` appropriately, and begin writing the code: ``` (function(){ "use strict"; exports.everyother = function(source, operator, options) { // TODO } })(); ``` For the example filter syntax, our function will be called with * source: an iterator over all the tiddlers tagged as `interesting` * operator: an object `{operator: "everyother", operand: ""}` * options: an object with the current Wiki object and a widget object, neither of which we need As is usually the case, we don't care about `operator.operator` here (since that information has already been used to look up our function); we also don't care about `operator.operand`, since there is no meaningful operand for this operation. We could implement the operator by iterating over the input tiddlers and explicitly building a result array of titles: ``` (function(){ "use strict"; exports.everyother = function(source, operator, options) { var result = []; var include = true; source(function(tiddler, title) { if (include) { result.push(title); } include = !include; }); return result; } })(); ``` That is, we supply a callback to `source` that negates `include` each time through (in order to grab every other result) and pushes the `title` of every other tiddler onto the result. Alternatively, we can return our own iterator, by returning a function that accepts a similar callback and only calls it on every other tiddler: ``` (function(){ "use strict"; exports.everyother = function(source, operator, options) { return function(callback) { var include = true; source(function(tiddler, title) { if (include) { callback(tiddler, title); } include = !include; }); }; } })(); ``` Either way, we could interpret the `!` flag on the filter, if present, to mean that we want the //other// half of the tiddlers, by using it to set the initial value of `include`: `var include = operator.prefix !== "!";` ! Filter Behaviour As with [[JavaScript Macros]], filter operators should not make modifications to tiddlers, but only return a list of tiddlers or a tiddler iterator.