.. | ||
index.js | ||
LICENSE | ||
package.json | ||
README.md |
repeat-string
Repeat the given string n times. Fastest implementation for repeating a string.
Install
Install with npm:
$ npm install repeat-string --save
Usage
repeat
Repeat the given string
the specified number
of times.
Example:
Params
string
{String}: The string to repeatnumber
{Number}: The number of times to repeat the stringreturns
{String}: Repeated string
Example
var repeat = require('repeat-string');
repeat('A', 5);
//=> AAAAA
Benchmarks
Repeat string is significantly faster than the native method (which is itself faster than repeating):
#1: 5
native x 10,484,023 ops/sec ±1.24% (89 runs sampled)
repeat-string x 16,189,255 ops/sec ±1.05% (91 runs sampled)
repeating x 9,051,715 ops/sec ±1.18% (90 runs sampled)
#2: 50
native x 7,975,566 ops/sec ±1.29% (91 runs sampled)
repeat-string x 15,317,972 ops/sec ±1.16% (87 runs sampled)
repeating x 6,279,112 ops/sec ±1.29% (89 runs sampled)
#3: 250
native x 6,212,752 ops/sec ±1.33% (91 runs sampled)
repeat-string x 14,565,168 ops/sec ±0.83% (93 runs sampled)
repeating x 5,787,124 ops/sec ±1.25% (92 runs sampled)
#4: 2000
native x 4,912,163 ops/sec ±1.27% (91 runs sampled)
repeat-string x 17,129,748 ops/sec ±1.01% (91 runs sampled)
repeating x 4,613,043 ops/sec ±1.37% (91 runs sampled)
#5: 20000
native x 4,506,624 ops/sec ±1.33% (90 runs sampled)
repeat-string x 14,877,672 ops/sec ±1.00% (93 runs sampled)
repeating x 4,305,756 ops/sec ±1.36% (89 runs sampled)
Run the benchmarks
Install dev dependencies:
npm i -d && node benchmark
Related projects
repeat-element: Create an array by repeating the given value n times. | homepage
Contributing
Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, please create an issue.
Building docs
Generate readme and API documentation with verb:
$ npm install verb && npm run docs
Or, if verb is installed globally:
$ verb
Running tests
Install dev dependencies:
$ npm install -d && npm test
Author
Jon Schlinkert
License
Copyright © 2016 Jon Schlinkert Released under the MIT license.
This file was generated by verb, v0.9.0, on February 29, 2016.