# nanomatch [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/nanomatch.svg?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/nanomatch) [![NPM monthly downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/nanomatch.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/nanomatch) [![NPM total downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dt/nanomatch.svg?style=flat)](https://npmjs.org/package/nanomatch) [![Linux Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/micromatch/nanomatch.svg?style=flat&label=Travis)](https://travis-ci.org/micromatch/nanomatch) [![Windows Build Status](https://img.shields.io/appveyor/ci/micromatch/nanomatch.svg?style=flat&label=AppVeyor)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/micromatch/nanomatch) > Fast, minimal glob matcher for node.js. Similar to micromatch, minimatch and multimatch, but complete Bash 4.3 wildcard support only (no support for exglobs, posix brackets or braces)
Table of Contents - [What is nanomatch?](#what-is-nanomatch) - [Getting started](#getting-started) * [Installing nanomatch](#installing-nanomatch) * [Usage](#usage) - [Documentation](#documentation) * [Escaping](#escaping) - [API](#api) - [Options](#options) * [options.basename](#optionsbasename) * [options.bash](#optionsbash) * [options.cache](#optionscache) * [options.dot](#optionsdot) * [options.failglob](#optionsfailglob) * [options.ignore](#optionsignore) * [options.matchBase](#optionsmatchbase) * [options.nocase](#optionsnocase) * [options.nodupes](#optionsnodupes) * [options.noglobstar](#optionsnoglobstar) * [options.nonegate](#optionsnonegate) * [options.nonull](#optionsnonull) * [options.nullglob](#optionsnullglob) * [options.snapdragon](#optionssnapdragon) * [options.sourcemap](#optionssourcemap) * [options.unescape](#optionsunescape) * [options.unixify](#optionsunixify) - [Features](#features) - [Bash expansion libs](#bash-expansion-libs) - [Benchmarks](#benchmarks) * [Running benchmarks](#running-benchmarks) * [Latest results](#latest-results) - [About](#about) * [Related projects](#related-projects) * [Contributing](#contributing) * [Running tests](#running-tests) * [Author](#author) * [License](#license)
Release history ## History ### key Changelog entries are classified using the following labels _(from [keep-a-changelog](https://github.com/olivierlacan/keep-a-changelog)_): * `added`: for new features * `changed`: for changes in existing functionality * `deprecated`: for once-stable features removed in upcoming releases * `removed`: for deprecated features removed in this release * `fixed`: for any bug fixes * `bumped`: updated dependencies, only minor or higher will be listed. ### [1.1.0](https://github.com/micromatch/nanomatch/compare/1.0.4...1.1.0) - 2017-04-11 **Fixed** * adds support for unclosed quotes **Added** * adds support for `options.noglobstar` ### [1.0.4](https://github.com/micromatch/nanomatch/compare/1.0.3...1.0.4) - 2017-04-06 Housekeeping updates. Adds documentation section about escaping, cleans up utils. ### [1.0.3](https://github.com/micromatch/nanomatch/compare/1.0.1...1.0.3) - 2017-04-06 This release includes fixes for windows path edge cases and other improvements for stricter adherence to bash spec. **Fixed** * More windows path edge cases **Added** * Support for bash-like quoted strings for escaping sequences of characters, such as `foo/"**"/bar` where `**` should be matched literally and not evaluated as special characters. ### [1.0.1](https://github.com/micromatch/nanomatch/compare/1.0.0...1.0.1) - 2016-12-12 **Added** * Support for windows path edge cases where backslashes are used in brackets or other unusual combinations. ### [1.0.0](https://github.com/micromatch/nanomatch/compare/0.1.0...1.0.0) - 2016-12-12 Stable release. ### [0.1.0] - 2016-10-08 First release.
## What is nanomatch? Nanomatch is a fast and accurate glob matcher with full support for standard Bash glob features, including the following "metacharacters": `*`, `**`, `?` and `[...]`. **Learn more** * [Getting started](#getting-started): learn how to install and begin using nanomatch * [Features](#features): jump to info about supported patterns, and a glob matching reference * [API documentation](#api): jump to available options and methods * [Unit tests](test): visit unit tests. there is no better way to learn a code library than spending time the unit tests. Nanomatch has 36,000 unit tests - go become a glob matching ninja!
How is this different? **Speed and accuracy** Nanomatch uses [snapdragon](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/snapdragon) for parsing and compiling globs, which results in: * Granular control over the entire conversion process in a way that is easy to understand, reason about, and customize. * Faster matching, from a combination of optimized glob patterns and (optional) caching. * Much greater accuracy than minimatch. In fact, nanomatch passes _all of the spec tests_ from bash, including some that bash still fails. However, since there is no real specification for globs, if you encounter a pattern that yields unexpected match results [after researching previous issues](../../issues), [please let us know](../../issues/new). **Basic globbing only** Nanomatch supports [basic globbing only](#features), which is limited to `*`, `**`, `?` and regex-like brackets. If you need support for the other [bash "expansion" types](#bash-expansion-libs) (in addition to the wildcard matching provided by nanomatch), consider using [micromatch](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/micromatch) instead. _(micromatch >=3.0.0 uses the nanomatch parser and compiler for basic glob matching)_
## Getting started ### Installing nanomatch **Install with [yarn](https://yarnpkg.com/)** ```sh $ yarn add nanomatch ``` **Install with [npm](https://npmjs.com)** ```sh $ npm install nanomatch ``` ### Usage Add nanomatch to your project using node's `require()` system: ```js var nanomatch = require('nanomatch'); // the main export is a function that takes an array of strings to match // and a string or array of patterns to use for matching nanomatch(list, patterns[, options]); ``` **Params** * `list` **{String|Array}**: List of strings to perform matches against. This is often a list of file paths. * `patterns` **{String|Array}**: One or more [glob paterns](#features) to use for matching. * `options` **{Object}**: Any [supported options](#options) may be passed **Examples** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); console.log(nm(['a', 'b/b', 'c/c/c'], '*')); //=> ['a'] console.log(nm(['a', 'b/b', 'c/c/c'], '*/*')); //=> ['b/b'] console.log(nm(['a', 'b/b', 'c/c/c'], '**')); //=> ['a', 'b/b', 'c/c/c'] ``` See the [API documentation](#api) for available methods and [options](https://github.com/einaros/options.js). ## Documentation ### Escaping _Backslashes and quotes_ can be used to escape characters, forcing nanomatch to regard those characters as a literal characters. **Backslashes** Use backslashes to escape single characters. For example, the following pattern would match `foo/*/bar` exactly: ```js 'foo/\*/bar' ``` The following pattern would match `foo/` followed by a literal `*`, followed by zero or more of any characters besides `/`, followed by `/bar`. ```js 'foo/\**/bar' ``` **Quoted strings** Use single or double quotes to escape sequences of characters. For example, the following patterns would match `foo/**/bar` exactly: ```js 'foo/"**"/bar' 'foo/\'**\'/bar' "foo/'**'/bar" ``` **Matching literal quotes** If you need to match quotes literally, you can escape them as well. For example, the following will match `foo/"*"/bar`, `foo/"a"/bar`, `foo/"b"/bar`, or `foo/"c"/bar`: ```js 'foo/\\"*\\"/bar' ``` And the following will match `foo/'*'/bar`, `foo/'a'/bar`, `foo/'b'/bar`, or `foo/'c'/bar`: ```js 'foo/\\\'*\\\'/bar' ``` ## API ### [nanomatch](index.js#L40) The main function takes a list of strings and one or more glob patterns to use for matching. **Params** * `list` **{Array}**: A list of strings to match * `patterns` **{String|Array}**: One or more glob patterns to use for matching. * `options` **{Object}**: See available [options](#options) for changing how matches are performed * `returns` **{Array}**: Returns an array of matches **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm(list, patterns[, options]); console.log(nm(['a.js', 'a.txt'], ['*.js'])); //=> [ 'a.js' ] ``` ### [.match](index.js#L106) Similar to the main function, but `pattern` must be a string. **Params** * `list` **{Array}**: Array of strings to match * `pattern` **{String}**: Glob pattern to use for matching. * `options` **{Object}**: See available [options](#options) for changing how matches are performed * `returns` **{Array}**: Returns an array of matches **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm.match(list, pattern[, options]); console.log(nm.match(['a.a', 'a.aa', 'a.b', 'a.c'], '*.a')); //=> ['a.a', 'a.aa'] ``` ### [.isMatch](index.js#L167) Returns true if the specified `string` matches the given glob `pattern`. **Params** * `string` **{String}**: String to match * `pattern` **{String}**: Glob pattern to use for matching. * `options` **{Object}**: See available [options](#options) for changing how matches are performed * `returns` **{Boolean}**: Returns true if the string matches the glob pattern. **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm.isMatch(string, pattern[, options]); console.log(nm.isMatch('a.a', '*.a')); //=> true console.log(nm.isMatch('a.b', '*.a')); //=> false ``` ### [.some](index.js#L205) Returns true if some of the elements in the given `list` match any of the given glob `patterns`. **Params** * `list` **{String|Array}**: The string or array of strings to test. Returns as soon as the first match is found. * `patterns` **{String|Array}**: One or more glob patterns to use for matching. * `options` **{Object}**: See available [options](#options) for changing how matches are performed * `returns` **{Boolean}**: Returns true if any patterns match `str` **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm.some(list, patterns[, options]); console.log(nm.some(['foo.js', 'bar.js'], ['*.js', '!foo.js'])); // true console.log(nm.some(['foo.js'], ['*.js', '!foo.js'])); // false ``` ### [.every](index.js#L243) Returns true if every element in the given `list` matches at least one of the given glob `patterns`. **Params** * `list` **{String|Array}**: The string or array of strings to test. * `patterns` **{String|Array}**: One or more glob patterns to use for matching. * `options` **{Object}**: See available [options](#options) for changing how matches are performed * `returns` **{Boolean}**: Returns true if any patterns match `str` **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm.every(list, patterns[, options]); console.log(nm.every('foo.js', ['foo.js'])); // true console.log(nm.every(['foo.js', 'bar.js'], ['*.js'])); // true console.log(nm.every(['foo.js', 'bar.js'], ['*.js', '!foo.js'])); // false console.log(nm.every(['foo.js'], ['*.js', '!foo.js'])); // false ``` ### [.any](index.js#L277) Returns true if **any** of the given glob `patterns` match the specified `string`. **Params** * `str` **{String|Array}**: The string to test. * `patterns` **{String|Array}**: One or more glob patterns to use for matching. * `options` **{Object}**: See available [options](#options) for changing how matches are performed * `returns` **{Boolean}**: Returns true if any patterns match `str` **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm.any(string, patterns[, options]); console.log(nm.any('a.a', ['b.*', '*.a'])); //=> true console.log(nm.any('a.a', 'b.*')); //=> false ``` ### [.all](index.js#L325) Returns true if **all** of the given `patterns` match the specified string. **Params** * `str` **{String|Array}**: The string to test. * `patterns` **{String|Array}**: One or more glob patterns to use for matching. * `options` **{Object}**: See available [options](#options) for changing how matches are performed * `returns` **{Boolean}**: Returns true if any patterns match `str` **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm.all(string, patterns[, options]); console.log(nm.all('foo.js', ['foo.js'])); // true console.log(nm.all('foo.js', ['*.js', '!foo.js'])); // false console.log(nm.all('foo.js', ['*.js', 'foo.js'])); // true console.log(nm.all('foo.js', ['*.js', 'f*', '*o*', '*o.js'])); // true ``` ### [.not](index.js#L359) Returns a list of strings that _**do not match any**_ of the given `patterns`. **Params** * `list` **{Array}**: Array of strings to match. * `patterns` **{String|Array}**: One or more glob pattern to use for matching. * `options` **{Object}**: See available [options](#options) for changing how matches are performed * `returns` **{Array}**: Returns an array of strings that **do not match** the given patterns. **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm.not(list, patterns[, options]); console.log(nm.not(['a.a', 'b.b', 'c.c'], '*.a')); //=> ['b.b', 'c.c'] ``` ### [.contains](index.js#L394) Returns true if the given `string` contains the given pattern. Similar to [.isMatch](#isMatch) but the pattern can match any part of the string. **Params** * `str` **{String}**: The string to match. * `patterns` **{String|Array}**: Glob pattern to use for matching. * `options` **{Object}**: See available [options](#options) for changing how matches are performed * `returns` **{Boolean}**: Returns true if the patter matches any part of `str`. **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm.contains(string, pattern[, options]); console.log(nm.contains('aa/bb/cc', '*b')); //=> true console.log(nm.contains('aa/bb/cc', '*d')); //=> false ``` ### [.matchKeys](index.js#L450) Filter the keys of the given object with the given `glob` pattern and `options`. Does not attempt to match nested keys. If you need this feature, use [glob-object](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/glob-object) instead. **Params** * `object` **{Object}**: The object with keys to filter. * `patterns` **{String|Array}**: One or more glob patterns to use for matching. * `options` **{Object}**: See available [options](#options) for changing how matches are performed * `returns` **{Object}**: Returns an object with only keys that match the given patterns. **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm.matchKeys(object, patterns[, options]); var obj = { aa: 'a', ab: 'b', ac: 'c' }; console.log(nm.matchKeys(obj, '*b')); //=> { ab: 'b' } ``` ### [.matcher](index.js#L479) Returns a memoized matcher function from the given glob `pattern` and `options`. The returned function takes a string to match as its only argument and returns true if the string is a match. **Params** * `pattern` **{String}**: Glob pattern * `options` **{Object}**: See available [options](#options) for changing how matches are performed. * `returns` **{Function}**: Returns a matcher function. **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm.matcher(pattern[, options]); var isMatch = nm.matcher('*.!(*a)'); console.log(isMatch('a.a')); //=> false console.log(isMatch('a.b')); //=> true ``` ### [.makeRe](index.js#L553) Create a regular expression from the given glob `pattern`. **Params** * `pattern` **{String}**: A glob pattern to convert to regex. * `options` **{Object}**: See available [options](#options) for changing how matches are performed. * `returns` **{RegExp}**: Returns a regex created from the given pattern. **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm.makeRe(pattern[, options]); console.log(nm.makeRe('*.js')); //=> /^(?:(\.[\\\/])?(?!\.)(?=.)[^\/]*?\.js)$/ ``` ### [.create](index.js#L616) Parses the given glob `pattern` and returns an object with the compiled `output` and optional source `map`. **Params** * `pattern` **{String}**: Glob pattern to parse and compile. * `options` **{Object}**: Any [options](#options) to change how parsing and compiling is performed. * `returns` **{Object}**: Returns an object with the parsed AST, compiled string and optional source map. **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm.create(pattern[, options]); console.log(nm.create('abc/*.js')); // { options: { source: 'string', sourcemap: true }, // state: {}, // compilers: // { ... }, // output: '(\\.[\\\\\\/])?abc\\/(?!\\.)(?=.)[^\\/]*?\\.js', // ast: // { type: 'root', // errors: [], // nodes: // [ ... ], // dot: false, // input: 'abc/*.js' }, // parsingErrors: [], // map: // { version: 3, // sources: [ 'string' ], // names: [], // mappings: 'AAAA,GAAG,EAAC,kBAAC,EAAC,EAAE', // sourcesContent: [ 'abc/*.js' ] }, // position: { line: 1, column: 28 }, // content: {}, // files: {}, // idx: 6 } ``` ### [.parse](index.js#L655) Parse the given `str` with the given `options`. **Params** * `str` **{String}** * `options` **{Object}** * `returns` **{Object}**: Returns an AST **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm.parse(pattern[, options]); var ast = nm.parse('a/{b,c}/d'); console.log(ast); // { type: 'root', // errors: [], // input: 'a/{b,c}/d', // nodes: // [ { type: 'bos', val: '' }, // { type: 'text', val: 'a/' }, // { type: 'brace', // nodes: // [ { type: 'brace.open', val: '{' }, // { type: 'text', val: 'b,c' }, // { type: 'brace.close', val: '}' } ] }, // { type: 'text', val: '/d' }, // { type: 'eos', val: '' } ] } ``` ### [.compile](index.js#L703) Compile the given `ast` or string with the given `options`. **Params** * `ast` **{Object|String}** * `options` **{Object}** * `returns` **{Object}**: Returns an object that has an `output` property with the compiled string. **Example** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); nm.compile(ast[, options]); var ast = nm.parse('a/{b,c}/d'); console.log(nm.compile(ast)); // { options: { source: 'string' }, // state: {}, // compilers: // { eos: [Function], // noop: [Function], // bos: [Function], // brace: [Function], // 'brace.open': [Function], // text: [Function], // 'brace.close': [Function] }, // output: [ 'a/(b|c)/d' ], // ast: // { ... }, // parsingErrors: [] } ``` ### [.clearCache](index.js#L726) Clear the regex cache. **Example** ```js nm.clearCache(); ``` ## Options
basename ### options.basename Allow glob patterns without slashes to match a file path based on its basename. Same behavior as [minimatch](https://github.com/isaacs/minimatch) option `matchBase`. Type: `Boolean` Default: `false` **Example** ```js nm(['a/b.js', 'a/c.md'], '*.js'); //=> [] nm(['a/b.js', 'a/c.md'], '*.js', {matchBase: true}); //=> ['a/b.js'] ```
bash ### options.bash Enabled by default, this option enforces bash-like behavior with stars immediately following a bracket expression. Bash bracket expressions are similar to regex character classes, but unlike regex, a star following a bracket expression **does not repeat the bracketed characters**. Instead, the star is treated the same as an other star. Type: `Boolean` Default: `true` **Example** ```js var files = ['abc', 'ajz']; console.log(nm(files, '[a-c]*')); //=> ['abc', 'ajz'] console.log(nm(files, '[a-c]*', {bash: false})); ```
cache ### options.cache Disable regex and function memoization. Type: `Boolean` Default: `undefined`
dot ### options.dot Match dotfiles. Same behavior as [minimatch](https://github.com/isaacs/minimatch) option `dot`. Type: `Boolean` Default: `false`
failglob ### options.failglob Similar to the `--failglob` behavior in Bash, throws an error when no matches are found. Type: `Boolean` Default: `undefined`
ignore ### options.ignore String or array of glob patterns to match files to ignore. Type: `String|Array` Default: `undefined`
matchBase ### options.matchBase Alias for [options.basename](#options-basename).
nocase ### options.nocase Use a case-insensitive regex for matching files. Same behavior as [minimatch](https://github.com/isaacs/minimatch). Type: `Boolean` Default: `undefined`
nodupes ### options.nodupes Remove duplicate elements from the result array. Type: `Boolean` Default: `true` (enabled by default) **Example** Example of using the `unescape` and `nodupes` options together: ```js nm.match(['a/b/c', 'a/b/c'], '**'); //=> ['abc'] nm.match(['a/b/c', 'a/b/c'], '**', {nodupes: false}); //=> ['a/b/c', 'a/b/c'] ```
nonegate ### options.noglobstar Disable matching with globstars (`**`). Type: `Boolean` Default: `undefined` ```js nm(['a/b', 'a/b/c', 'a/b/c/d'], 'a/**'); //=> ['a/b', 'a/b/c', 'a/b/c/d'] nm(['a/b', 'a/b/c', 'a/b/c/d'], 'a/**', {noglobstar: true}); //=> ['a/b'] ```
nonegate ### options.nonegate Disallow negation (`!`) patterns, and treat leading `!` as a literal character to match. Type: `Boolean` Default: `undefined`
nonull ### options.nonull Alias for [options.nullglob](#options-nullglob).
nullglob ### options.nullglob If `true`, when no matches are found the actual (arrayified) glob pattern is returned instead of an empty array. Same behavior as [minimatch](https://github.com/isaacs/minimatch) option `nonull`. Type: `Boolean` Default: `undefined`
snapdragon ### options.snapdragon Pass your own instance of [snapdragon](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/snapdragon) to customize parsers or compilers. Type: `Object` Default: `undefined`
snapdragon ### options.sourcemap Generate a source map by enabling the `sourcemap` option with the `.parse`, `.compile`, or `.create` methods. **Examples** ```js var nm = require('nanomatch'); var res = nm.create('abc/*.js', {sourcemap: true}); console.log(res.map); // { version: 3, // sources: [ 'string' ], // names: [], // mappings: 'AAAA,GAAG,EAAC,iBAAC,EAAC,EAAE', // sourcesContent: [ 'abc/*.js' ] } var ast = nm.parse('abc/**/*.js'); var res = nm.compile(ast, {sourcemap: true}); console.log(res.map); // { version: 3, // sources: [ 'string' ], // names: [], // mappings: 'AAAA,GAAG,EAAC,2BAAE,EAAC,iBAAC,EAAC,EAAE', // sourcesContent: [ 'abc/**/*.js' ] } ```
unescape ### options.unescape Remove backslashes from returned matches. Type: `Boolean` Default: `undefined` **Example** In this example we want to match a literal `*`: ```js nm.match(['abc', 'a\\*c'], 'a\\*c'); //=> ['a\\*c'] nm.match(['abc', 'a\\*c'], 'a\\*c', {unescape: true}); //=> ['a*c'] ```
unixify ### options.unixify Convert path separators on returned files to posix/unix-style forward slashes. Type: `Boolean` Default: `true` **Example** ```js nm.match(['a\\b\\c'], 'a/**'); //=> ['a/b/c'] nm.match(['a\\b\\c'], {unixify: false}); //=> ['a\\b\\c'] ```
## Features Nanomatch has full support for standard Bash glob features, including the following "metacharacters": `*`, `**`, `?` and `[...]`. Here are some examples of how they work: | **Pattern** | **Description** | | --- | --- | | `*` | Matches any string except for `/`, leading `.`, or `/.` inside a path | | `**` | Matches any string including `/`, but not a leading `.` or `/.` inside a path. More than two stars (e.g. `***` is treated the same as one star, and `**` loses its special meaning | when it's not the only thing in a path segment, per Bash specifications) | | `foo*` | Matches any string beginning with `foo` | | `*bar*` | Matches any string containing `bar` (beginning, middle or end) | | `*.min.js` | Matches any string ending with `.min.js` | | `[abc]*.js` | Matches any string beginning with `a`, `b`, or `c` and ending with `.js` | | `abc?` | Matches `abcd` or `abcz` but not `abcde` | The exceptions noted for `*` apply to all patterns that contain a `*`. **Not supported** The following extended-globbing features are not supported: * [brace expansion](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/braces) (e.g. `{a,b,c}`) * [extglobs](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/extglob) (e.g. `@(a|!(c|d))`) * [POSIX brackets](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/expand-brackets) (e.g. `[[:alpha:][:digit:]]`) If you need any of these features consider using [micromatch](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/micromatch) instead. ## Bash expansion libs Nanomatch is part of a suite of libraries aimed at bringing the power and expressiveness of [Bash's](https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/) matching and expansion capabilities to JavaScript, _and - as you can see by the [benchmarks](#benchmarks) - without sacrificing speed_. | **Related library** | **Matching Type** | **Example** | **Description** | | --- | --- | --- | --- | | `nanomatch` (you are here) | Wildcards | `*` | [Filename expansion](https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Filename-Expansion.html#Filename-Expansion), also referred to as globbing and pathname expansion, allows the use of [wildcards](#features) for matching. | | [expand-tilde](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/expand-tilde) | Tildes | `~` | [Tilde expansion](https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Tilde-Expansion.html#Tilde-Expansion) converts the leading tilde in a file path to the user home directory. | | [braces](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/braces) | Braces | `{a,b,c}` | [Brace expansion](https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Brace-Expansion.html) | | [expand-brackets](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/expand-brackets) | Brackets | `[[:alpha:]]` | [POSIX character classes](https://www.gnu.org/software/grep/manual/html_node/Character-Classes-and-Bracket-Expressions.html) (also referred to as POSIX brackets, or POSIX character classes) | | [extglob](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/extglob) | Parens | `!(a\ | b)` | [Extglobs](https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Pattern-Matching.html#Pattern-Matching) | | [micromatch](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/micromatch) | All | all | Micromatch is built on top of the other libraries. | There are many resources available on the web if you want to dive deeper into how these features work in Bash. ## Benchmarks ### Running benchmarks Install dev dependencies: ```bash npm i -d && node benchmark ``` ### Latest results ```bash Benchmarking: (6 of 6) · globstar-basic · large-list-globstar · long-list-globstar · negation-basic · not-glob-basic · star-basic # benchmark/fixtures/match/globstar-basic.js (182 bytes) minimatch x 31,046 ops/sec ±0.56% (87 runs sampled) multimatch x 27,787 ops/sec ±1.02% (88 runs sampled) nanomatch x 453,686 ops/sec ±1.11% (89 runs sampled) fastest is nanomatch # benchmark/fixtures/match/large-list-globstar.js (485686 bytes) minimatch x 25.23 ops/sec ±0.46% (44 runs sampled) multimatch x 25.20 ops/sec ±0.97% (43 runs sampled) nanomatch x 735 ops/sec ±0.66% (89 runs sampled) fastest is nanomatch # benchmark/fixtures/match/long-list-globstar.js (194085 bytes) minimatch x 258 ops/sec ±0.87% (83 runs sampled) multimatch x 264 ops/sec ±0.90% (82 runs sampled) nanomatch x 1,858 ops/sec ±0.56% (89 runs sampled) fastest is nanomatch # benchmark/fixtures/match/negation-basic.js (132 bytes) minimatch x 74,240 ops/sec ±1.22% (88 runs sampled) multimatch x 25,360 ops/sec ±1.18% (89 runs sampled) nanomatch x 545,835 ops/sec ±1.12% (88 runs sampled) fastest is nanomatch # benchmark/fixtures/match/not-glob-basic.js (93 bytes) minimatch x 92,753 ops/sec ±1.59% (86 runs sampled) multimatch x 50,125 ops/sec ±1.43% (87 runs sampled) nanomatch x 1,195,648 ops/sec ±1.18% (87 runs sampled) fastest is nanomatch # benchmark/fixtures/match/star-basic.js (93 bytes) minimatch x 70,746 ops/sec ±1.51% (86 runs sampled) multimatch x 54,317 ops/sec ±1.45% (89 runs sampled) nanomatch x 602,748 ops/sec ±1.17% (86 runs sampled) fastest is nanomatch ``` ## About ### Related projects * [is-extglob](https://www.npmjs.com/package/is-extglob): Returns true if a string has an extglob. | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-extglob "Returns true if a string has an extglob.") * [is-glob](https://www.npmjs.com/package/is-glob): Returns `true` if the given string looks like a glob pattern or an extglob pattern… [more](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-glob) | [homepage](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-glob "Returns `true` if the given string looks like a glob pattern or an extglob pattern. This makes it easy to create code that only uses external modules like node-glob when necessary, resulting in much faster code execution and initialization time, and a bet") ### Contributing Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, [please create an issue](../../issues/new). Please read the [contributing guide](.github/contributing.md) for advice on opening issues, pull requests, and coding standards. ### Running tests Running and reviewing unit tests is a great way to get familiarized with a library and its API. You can install dependencies and run tests with the following command: ```sh $ npm install && npm test ``` ### Author **Jon Schlinkert** * [github/jonschlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert) * [twitter/jonschlinkert](https://twitter.com/jonschlinkert) ### License Copyright © 2017, [Jon Schlinkert](https://github.com/jonschlinkert). Released under the [MIT License](LICENSE). *** _This file was generated by [verb-generate-readme](https://github.com/verbose/verb-generate-readme), v0.6.0, on May 28, 2017._