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	maximatch 
Extends
multimatch()with support for filter functions and regular expressions
Install
$ npm install --save maximatch
Usage
var maximatch = require('maximatch');
maximatch(['unicorn', 'cake', 'rainbows'], ['*', '!cake']);
//=> ['unicorn', 'rainbows']
maximatch(['unicorn', 'cake', 'rainbows'], function(path) { return path.length > 4; });
//=> ['unicorn', 'rainbows']
maximatch(['unicorn', 'cake', 'rainbows'], /^[^k]+$/);
//=> ['unicorn', 'rainbows']
maximatch(['unicorn', 'cake', 'rainbows'], [function(path) { return path.charAt(0) === 'u'; }, /w/]);
//=> ['unicorn', 'rainbows']
See the tests for more usage examples and expected matches.
API
Same as minimatch.match() except for pattern also accepting a filter function, a regular expression, or an array that can contain globs, filter functions and regular expressions.
var results = maximatch(paths, patterns);
The return value is an array of matching paths.
How multiple patterns work
Positive patterns (e.g. foo or *) add to the results, while negative patterns (e.g. !foo) subtract from the results.
Therefore a lone negation (e.g. ['!foo']) will never match anything – use ['*', '!foo'] instead.
Globbing patterns
Just a quick overview.
- *matches any number of characters, but not- /
- ?matches a single character, but not- /
- **matches any number of characters, including- /, as long as it's the only thing in a path part
- {}allows for a comma-separated list of "or" expressions
- !at the beginning of a pattern will negate the match
Related
See globby if you need to match against the filesystem instead of a list.
License
MIT © Sindre Sorhus, Jon Schlinkert, Tim Kendrick
