Take a string and a number and perform binary case switching on alpha characters.
npm install binary-case



Take a string and a number and perform binary case switching on alpha characters.
``js
const binaryCase = require('binary-case');
// 3 in binary = 011
const number = 3;
// 011 reversed to 110 so the first 2 characters will toggle case
const value = binaryCase('abc', 3); // value: "ABc"
`
`sh`
$ npm install binary-case
Take a string and a number and perform binary case switching on alpha characters.
Parameters
- string - The string value to toggle alpha character cases on.
- number - A number that will be converted to binary to determine case switching.
- options - An optional object that defines options for the function.
- allowOverflow - Defaults to true. Set to false to have the binaryCase function return false when the number provided creates a binary string that is larger than the number of alpha characters in the string provided to be converted. Overflow will cause case switching sequences to repeat.
`js`
binaryCase('abc', 0); // 'abc'
binaryCase('abc', 8); // 'abc'
binaryCase('abc', 8, { allowOverflow: false }); // false
Returns a string if successful or false on failure.
Get an iterator object that will allow iteration through all variations of the string's casing.
Parameters
- string - The string to produce case variations for.
- options - An optional object that defines options for the iterator.
- startIndex - The number to start with for producing variations. This will reduce the total number of possible variations.
Returns an object with a next property.
Example
`js`
const iterator = binaryCase.iterator('abc');
iterator.next().value; // 'abc'
iterator.next().value; // 'Abc'
iterator.next().value; // 'aBc'
iterator.next().value; // 'ABc'
Determine the maximum number that can be used before causing repeating case variations.
Parameters
- string - The string value to count the number of possible case variations on.
Returns a number.
This calculation is simple:
1. Determine how many alpha characters exist in the string (a through z and A through Z)
2. The result is 2 to the power of the number of alpha characters, minus 1.
For example: abc has 3 alpha characters. 2^3 - 1 = 7`
Get an array of all possible case variations.
Parameters
- string - The string value to get case variations for.
Returns an array of strings.