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Another biased type checking solution for Javascript

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typeforce

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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('typeforce')

// supported primitives 'Array', 'Boolean', 'Buffer', 'Number', 'Object', 'String'
typeforce('Array', [])

typeforce('Number', [])
// TypeError: Expected Number, got Array

// array types
typeforce(['Object'], [{}])
typeforce(typeforce.arrayOf('Object'), [{}, {}, {}])

// enforces object properties 
typeforce({
  foo: 'Number'
}, {
  foo: 'bar'
})
// TypeError: Expected property "foo" of type Number, got String "bar"

// maybe types
typeforce('?Number', 2)
typeforce('?Number', null)
typeforce(typeforce.maybe(typeforce.Number), 2)
typeforce(typeforce.maybe(typeforce.Number), null)

// sum types
typeforce(typeforce.anyOf('String', 'Number'), 2)
typeforce(typeforce.allOf({ x: typeforce.Number }, { y: typeforce.Number }), {
  x: 1,
  y: 2
})

// value types
typeforce(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
}

typeforce(LongString, '00000000000000000000000000000000')
// => OK!

typeforce(LongString, 'not long enough')
// TypeError: Expected LongString, got String 'not long enough'

Protips:

// use precompiled primitives for high performance
typeforce(typeforce.Array, array)

// or just precompile a template
const type = {
  foo: 'Number',
  bar: '?String'
}

const fastType = typeforce.compile(type)
// fastType => typeforce.object({
//   foo: typeforce.Number,
//   bar: typeforce.maybe(typeforce.String)
// })

// use strictness for recursive types to enforce whitelisting properties
typeforce({
  x: 'Number'
}, { x: 1 }, true)
// OK!

typeforce({
  x: 'Number'
}, { x: 1, y: 2 }, true)
// TypeError: Unexpected property 'y' of type Number

Protips (extended types):

typeforce(typeforce.tuple('String', 'Number'), ['foo', 1])
// OK!

typeforce(typeforce.tuple('Number', 'Number'), ['not a number', 1])
// TypeError: Expected property "0" of type Number, got String 'not a number'

typeforce(typeforce.map('Number'), {
  'anyKeyIsOK': 1
})
// OK!

typeforce(typeforce.map('Number', typeforce.HexN(8)), {
  'deadbeef': 1,
  'ffff0000': 2
})
// OK!

function Foo () {
  this.x = 2
}

typeforce(typeforce.quacksLike('Foo'), new Foo())
// OK!

// Note, any Foo will do
typeforce(typeforce.quacksLike('Foo'), new (function Foo() {}))
// OK!

Protips (no throw)

const typeforce = require('typeforce/nothrow')
const value = 'foobar'

if (typeforce(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'
}

Protips (async)

const typeforce = require('typeforce/async')

typeforce(typeforce.Number, value, function (err) {
  if (err) return console.log(`Oops, ${typeforce.error.message}`)

  console.log(`${value} is a number`) // never happens
})

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.

LICENSE MIT