2.2.1 • Published 3 years ago
@tradle/typeforce v2.2.1
@tradle/typeforce
This is a fork of typeforce that is based on typescript and comes with strong types.
Another biased type checking solution for Javascript.
Exception messages may change between patch versions, as often the patch will change some behaviour that was unexpected and naturally it results in a different error message.
Examples
const typeforce = require('@tradle/typeforce')
const { assert } = typeforce
// supported primitives 'Array', 'Boolean', 'Buffer', 'Number', 'Object', 'String'
assert('Array', [])
assert('Number', [])
// TypeError: Expected Number, got Array
// array types
assert(['Object'], [{}])
assert(typeforce.arrayOf('Object'), [{}, {}, {}])
// enforces object properties
assert({
foo: 'Number'
}, {
foo: 'bar'
})
// TypeError: Expected property "foo" of type Number, got String "bar"
// maybe types
assert('?Number', 2)
assert('?Number', null)
assert(typeforce.maybe(typeforce.Number), 2)
assert(typeforce.maybe(typeforce.Number), null)
// sum types
assert(typeforce.anyOf('String', 'Number'), 2)
assert(typeforce.allOf({ x: typeforce.Number }, { y: typeforce.Number }), {
x: 1,
y: 2
})
// value types
assert(typeforce.value(3.14), 3.14)
// custom types
function LongString (value, strict) {
if (!typeforce.String(value)) return false
if (value.length !== 32) return false
return true
}
assert(LongString, '00000000000000000000000000000000')
// => OK!
assert(LongString, 'not long enough')
// TypeError: Expected LongString, got String 'not long enough'
Protips:
// use precompiled primitives for high performance
assert(typeforce.Array, array)
// or just precompile a template
const type = {
foo: 'Number',
bar: '?String'
}
const fastType = typeforce.compile(type)
fastType.assert({
foo: 1
})
fastType.match({
foo: 2,
bar: 'world'
})
// fastType => typeforce.object({
// foo: typeforce.Number,
// bar: typeforce.maybe(typeforce.String)
// })
// use strictness for recursive types to enforce whitelisting properties
assert({
x: 'Number'
}, { x: 1 }, true)
// OK!
assert({
x: 'Number'
}, { x: 1, y: 2 }, true)
// TypeError: Unexpected property 'y' of type Number
Protips (extended types):
assert(typeforce.tuple('String', 'Number'), ['foo', 1])
// OK!
assert(typeforce.tuple('Number', 'Number'), ['not a number', 1])
// TypeError: Expected property "0" of type Number, got String 'not a number'
assert(typeforce.map('Number'), {
'anyKeyIsOK': 1
})
// OK!
assert(typeforce.map('Number', typeforce.HexN(8)), {
'deadbeef': 1,
'ffff0000': 2
})
// OK!
function Foo () {
this.x = 2
}
assert(typeforce.quacksLike('Foo'), new Foo())
// OK!
// Note, any Foo will do
assert(typeforce.quacksLike('Foo'), new (function Foo() {}))
// OK!
Protips (no throw)
const typeforce = require('@tradle/typeforce')
const { match } = typeforce
const value = 'foobar'
if (match(typeforce.Number, value)) {
// didn't throw!
console.log(`${value} is a number`) // never happens
} else {
console.log(`Oops, ${typeforce.error.message}`)
// prints 'Oops, Expected Number, got String foobar'
}
WARNING: Be very wary of using the quacksLike
type, as it relies on the Foo.name
property.
If that property is mangled by a transpiler, such as uglifyjs
, you will have a bad time.