Inline function calls
npm install babel-plugin-nofn> Experimental Babel plugin which takes function call and transpiles it to inline code.

```
npm i --save-dev babel-plugin-nofn
The plugin converts function calls like:
`js`
nofn.forEach(arr, (value, index) => {
doSomething(value, index);
});
To something like this:
`js`
for (var target = arr, index = 0, value, l = target.length; value = target[index], index < l; index++) {
doSomething(value, index);
}
Which can be converted via minifier into this:
`js`
for(var b=arr,a=0,c,d=b.length;c=b[a],a
Versus:
`js`
c.forEach(d,function(a,b){doSomething(a,b)});
Where nofn is "meta variable" name (kind of "label" for converter). If you need "real" nofn library (for development purposes), look at the /lib/ folder.
nofn.forEach(arrayLike, callback(value, index)) - iterates over array items
- nofn.forOwn(object, callback(value, key)) - iterates over object props
- nofn.assign(target, source) - extends one object by another
- nofn.slice(arrayLike, start=0, end=length) - slices array
- nofn.map(arrayLike, callback(value, index)) - maps an array-like object via given callback
- nofn.reduce(arrayLike, callback(accumulator, current), initial) - works similar to Array#reduceSyntax restrictions (known issues)
- Don't use var in callbacks. Use let and const only to avoid variable collisions.
- Use only arrow functions because this keyword isn't handled yet.Performance
In general the plugin shows very good performance results but some functions from lodash or fast.js can be little faster.
Todo
- More functions
- Improve performance if possible
- Improve folder structureCurrent status
As described above, this is just experimental project. The usage is limited (for example nofn.assign accepts only two objects and nofn.slice` doesn't accept negative indexes) and you may not get any profit using this plugin.