1.1.2 • Published 2 years ago

utall v1.1.2

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

Utall

Build Status Code Coverage Issues Open Licenses Bundle Size NPM Release

General purpose utility library


Table of contents

  1. Installation
  2. Library

Installation

(npm|yarn) install utall

Library

nameimport
Monadutall.MonadMonad for pipeline functionality.

Monad

Constructor


const simple = new Monad(value)
const { value, logs } = new Monad<T>(value, []) // Value of type T

Usage

Monad is class based. It can be initiated with a contructor

For debugging and error handling the log array can be added to the constructor. This will impact the performance of the Monad.

Apply

Applies a function to the current value and returns a new Monad.

Promise / resolve

Promise adds a promise to the stack and returns a PromisedMonad. Resolve resolves all tasks in the PromisedMonad and returns back the Promise<Monad>.

Functions apply and promise accept extra arguments. This allows for the combination of different monads (see example)

All (static)

A static function to resolve multiple PromisedMonads in parallel (Promise.all)

Maybe (static)

An extension of Monad where pipeline halts when null or undefined is returned. Can be augmented with custom logic by giving a before function to the constructor. This can be used like Monad but is generally safer

Either (static)

Either replaces the apply function by accepting two functions. Herein the 'left' function is executed as a fallback to the 'right' function.

The instance of Either has a fold function to return back into a Maybe or Monad

Examples

  1. Simple pipeline

    const addOne = (e: number) => e + 1
    
    const monad = new Monad(1)
    monad.apply(addOne)
    
    console.log(monad.value) // 2
  2. With deconstructing

    const addOne = (e: number) => e + 1
    
    const { value, log } = new Monad(1, [])
      .apply(addOne)
      .apply(addOne)
    
    console.log(value) // 3
    console.log(log)   // [2,3]
  3. With new arguments

    const addOne = (e: number) => e + 1
    const multiply = (e: number, c: number) => e * c
    
    const { value, log } = new Monad(2, [])
      .apply(addOne)
      .apply(multiply, 2)
      .apply(multiply, 2)
    
    console.log(value) // 12
    console.log(log)   // [3,6,12]
  4. With Promises

    const addOne = (e: number) => e + 1
    const promisedAddOne = (e) => Promise.resolve(e + 1)
    
    const { value, log } = new Monad(1, [])
      .apply(addOne)
      .promise(promisedAddOne)
      .promise(promisedAddOne)
      .resolve()
    
    console.log(value) // 4
    console.log(log)   // [2,3,4]
  5. Combined monads

    const multiply = (e: number, c: number) => e * c
    
    const monadOne = new Monad(1, []).apply(multiply, 2)
    const monadTwo = new Monad(1).apply(multiply, 2)
    
    const { value, log } = monadOne.apply(multiply, monadTwo.value)
    
    console.log(value)          // 4
    console.log(log)            // [2,4]
    console.log(monadTwo.value) // 2
    console.log(monadTwo.log)   // undefined
  6. Combined promised monads (top level await for simplicity)

    const promisedAddOne = (e) => Promise.resolve(e + 1)
    
    const monadOne = new Monad(1, [])
      .promise(promisedAddOne)
      .promise(promisedAddOne)
    
    const monadTwo = new Monad(10, [])
      .promise(promisedAddOne)
      .promise(promisedAddOne)
    
    const [
      { value: value1, log: log1 },
      { value: value2, log: log2 },
    ] = await Monad.all<number>([monadOne, monadTwo])
    
    console.log(value1) // 3
    console.log(value2) // 12
    console.log(log1)   // [2,3]
    console.log(log2)   // [11,12]
  7. Use of a Maybe

    const addOne = (e: number) => e + 1
    const isNumber = (e) => typeof e === 'number'
    
    const maybe = new Monad.Maybe('1', null, isNumber)
    
    const { value } = maybe.apply(addOne)
    
    console.log(value) // '1'
  8. Use of an Either

    const addOne = (e: number) => e + 1
    const multiply = (e: number, c: number) => e * c
    
    const either = new Monad.Either(2)
      .apply(addOne, multiply, 2)
      .apply(addOne, addOne)
    
    console.log(either.value)      // 5
    console.log(either.fold(true)) // instanceof Maybe
    console.log(either.fold()) .   // instanceof Monad

License

MIT licensed

1.1.1

2 years ago

1.0.0

2 years ago

1.0.8

2 years ago

1.0.7

2 years ago

0.0.5

2 years ago

0.0.4

2 years ago

1.1.2

2 years ago

0.0.3

2 years ago

0.0.2

2 years ago

0.0.1

2 years ago