0.5.3 • Published 2 years ago

ts-transformer-enumerate v0.5.3

Weekly downloads
90
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
2 years ago

ts-transformer-enumerate

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A TypeScript custom transformer which enables enumerating members of the union of string literal types.

Requirement

TypeScript >= 2.4.1

How to use this package

This package exports 2 functions. One is enumerate which is used in TypeScript codes to enumerate members of the union of string literal types, while the other is a TypeScript custom transformer which is used to compile the enumerate function correctly.

How to use enumerate

import { enumerate } from 'ts-transformer-enumerate';

type Colors = 'green' | 'yellow' | 'red';
const Colors = enumerate<Colors>();

console.log(Colors.green); // 'green'
console.log(Colors.yellow); // 'yellow'
console.log(Colors.red); // 'red'

How to use the custom transformer

Unfortunately, TypeScript itself does not currently provide any easy way to use custom transformers (See https://github.com/Microsoft/TypeScript/issues/14419 for detail). It is recommended to use the custom transformer with webpack, Rollup, or ttypescript as described. You can also use the transformer with TypeScript compiler API as follows.

const ts = require('typescript');
const enumerateTransformer = require('ts-transformer-enumerate/transformer').default;

const program = ts.createProgram([/* your files to compile */], {
  strict: true,
  noEmitOnError: true,
  target: ts.ScriptTarget.ES5
});

const transformers = {
  before: [enumerateTransformer(program)],
  after: []
};
const { emitSkipped, diagnostics } = program.emit(undefined, undefined, undefined, false, transformers);

if (emitSkipped) {
  throw new Error(diagnostics.map(diagnostic => diagnostic.messageText).join('\n'));
}

As a result, the TypeScript code shown above is compiled into the following JavaScript.

"use strict";
Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", { value: true });
var ts_transformer_enumerate_1 = require("ts-transformer-enumerate");
var Colors = { green: "green", yellow: "yellow", red: "red" };
console.log(Colors.green); // 'green'
console.log(Colors.yellow); // 'yellow'
console.log(Colors.red); // 'red'

Note

  • The enumerate function can only be used as a call expression. Writing something like enumerate.toString() results in a runtime error.
  • enumerate does not work with a dynamic type parameter, i.e., enumerate<T>() in the following code is converted to an empty object({}).
class MyClass<T extends string> {
  enumerate() {
    return enumerate<T>();
  }
}

License

MIT

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