objectid 1.0.0
objectid: ^1.0.0 copied to clipboard
Blazing fast, cross-platform ObjectId implementation for the dart language.
ObjectId #
Blazing fast, cross-platform ObjectId implementation for the dart language! #
Fully compatible with ObjectId specification 💪.
Getting started. #
final id = ObjectId(); // Thats all 🔥😮!
print(id.hexString); // => 5f52c805df41c9df948e6135
Documentation #
ObjectId() #
Creates ObjectId instance based on current timestamp, process unique and counter. For more information take a look at ObjectId specification.
/// Creates ObjectId instance.
final id = ObjectId();
print(id.hexString); // => 5f52c805df41c9df948e6135
Benchamark (avg time):
1.694972710939354 us.
ObjectId.fromHexString(String hexString) #
Creates ObjectId from hex string.
TIP 💡:
Can be helpful for mapping hex strings returned from API / mongodb.
/// Create ObjectId instance.
final id = ObjectId.fromHexString('5f52c805df41c9df948e6135');
print(id.hexString); // => 5f52c805df41c9df948e6135
final id2 = ObjectId.fromHexString(id.hexString);
print(id == id2); // => true
Benchamark (avg time):
3.6401499394306052 us.
ObjectId.fromBytes(List #
Creates ObjectId from bytes.
TIP 💡:
Sometimes we may want to save ObjectId representation to file, binary format is the best way to do so.
/// Create ObjectId instance.
final id = ObjectId.fromBytes([95, 82, 205, 121, 180, 195, 28, 88, 32, 47, 183, 78]);
print(id.hexString); // => 5f52cd79b4c31c58202fb74e
/// To retrive ObjectId bytes as [Uint8list] you can use `bytes` property.
print(id.bytes); // => [95, 82, 205, 121, 180, 195, 28, 88, 32, 47, 183, 78]
final id2 = ObjectId.fromBytes(id.bytes);
print(id == id2); // => true
Benchamark (avg time):
0.58338475488028056 us.
ObjectId.fromValues(int millisecondsSinceEpoch, int processUnique, int counter) #
Creates an ObjectId from the provided integer values.
/// Create ObjectId instance.
/// `hexString = 000000000000000000000000`
final zeroed = ObjectId.fromValues(0, 0, 0);
/// `hexString = ffffffff0000000000000000`
final withTimestamp = ObjectId.fromValues(0x3e7fffffc18, 0, 0);
/// `hexString = 00000000ffffffffff000000`
final withProcessUnique = ObjectId.fromValues(0, 0xffffffffff, 0);
/// `hexString = 000000000000000000ffffff`
final withCounter = ObjectId.fromValues(0, 0, 0xffffff);
/// `hexString = ffffffffffffffffffffffff`
final filled = ObjectId.fromValues(0x3e7fffffc18, 0xffffffffff, 0xffffff);
Benchamark (avg time):
0.50956103355082625 us.
ObjectId.fromTimestamp(DateTime timestamp) #
Creates ObjectId from provided timestamp.
Propably you do not want to use this constructor. It is mostly used for ObjectId comparisons or sorting.
Warning ⚠️:
Only timestamp segment is set while the rest of the ObjectId is zeroed out.
/// Create ObjectId instance.
final id = ObjectId.fromTimestamp(DateTime.now());
print(id.hexString); // => 5f52d05e0000000000000000
Benchamark (avg time):
0.47020163256147746 us.
bool operator == #
It is possible to compare ObjectIds instances by equality operator ==
.
Comparison is based on ObjectId runtimeType
and bytes
.
int hashCode #
Hashcode is calculated by dart implementation of Austin Appleby, MurmurHash2 algorithm; wich is for ObjectId almost 2 times faster 🚀 than the commonly used Jenkins algorithm.
Property value will be generated only once (with the first read) and cached, what's strongly improves performance.
String hexString #
Returns a 24-bit hex string representation of the ObjectId.
Property value will be generated only once (with the first read) and cached, what's strongly improves performance.
DateTime timestamp #
Returns an accurate up to the second ObjectId generation time (timestamp).
Property value will be generated only once (with the first read) and cached, what's strongly improves performance.
Uint8List bytes #
Returns a ObjectId bytes.
static bool isValid(String hexString) #
Helper method that checks whether the provided hexString
is a valid ObjectId.
Benchmark hardware:
Intel i7 3770k, 16GB RAM DDR3, Windows 10
Benchmark is available in the example app.