.. | ||
.github | ||
benchmark | ||
examples | ||
test | ||
HISTORY.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
package.json | ||
README.md | ||
typed-function.js | ||
typed-function.min.js |
typed-function
Move type checking logic and type conversions outside of your function in a flexible, organized way. Automatically throw informative errors in case of wrong input arguments.
Features
typed-function has the following features:
- Runtime type-checking of input arguments.
- Automatic type conversion of arguments.
- Compose typed functions with multiple signatures.
- Supports union types, any type, and variable arguments.
- Detailed error messaging.
Supported environments: node.js, Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Opera, IE11+.
Why?
In JavaScript, functions can be called with any number and any type of arguments. When writing a function, the easiest way is to just assume that the function will be called with the correct input. This leaves the function's behavior on invalid input undefined. The function may throw some error, or worse, it may silently fail or return wrong results. Typical errors are TypeError: undefined is not a function or TypeError: Cannot call method 'request' of undefined. These error messages are not very helpful. It can be hard to debug them, as they can be the result of a series of nested function calls manipulating and propagating invalid or incomplete data.
Often, JavaScript developers add some basic type checking where it is important,
using checks like typeof fn === 'function'
, date instanceof Date
, and
Array.isArray(arr)
. For functions supporting multiple signatures,
the type checking logic can grow quite a bit, and distract from the actual
logic of the function.
For functions dealing with a considerable amount of type checking and conversion
logic, or functions facing a public API, it can be very useful to use the
typed-function
module to handle the type-checking logic. This way:
- Users of the function get useful and consistent error messages when using the function wrongly.
- The function cannot silently fail or silently give wrong results due to invalid input.
- Correct type of input is assured inside the function. The function's code becomes easier to understand as it only contains the actual function logic. Lower level utility functions called by the type-checked function can possibly be kept simpler as they don't need to do additional type checking.
It's important however not to overuse type checking:
- Locking down the type of input that a function accepts can unnecessarily limit its flexibility. Keep functions as flexible and forgiving as possible, follow the robustness principle here: "be liberal in what you accept and conservative in what you send" (Postel's law).
- There is no need to apply type checking to all functions. It may be enough to apply type checking to one tier of public facing functions.
- There is a performance penalty involved for all type checking, so applying it everywhere can unnecessarily worsen the performance.
Load
Install via npm:
npm install typed-function
Usage
Here are some usage examples. More examples are available in the /examples folder.
var typed = require('typed-function');
// create a typed function
var fn1 = typed({
'number, string': function (a, b) {
return 'a is a number, b is a string';
}
});
// create a typed function with multiple types per argument (type union)
var fn2 = typed({
'string, number | boolean': function (a, b) {
return 'a is a string, b is a number or a boolean';
}
});
// create a typed function with any type argument
var fn3 = typed({
'string, any': function (a, b) {
return 'a is a string, b can be anything';
}
});
// create a typed function with multiple signatures
var fn4 = typed({
'number': function (a) {
return 'a is a number';
},
'number, boolean': function (a, b) {
return 'a is a number, b is a boolean';
},
'number, number': function (a, b) {
return 'a is a number, b is a number';
}
});
// create a typed function from a plain function with signature
function fnPlain(a, b) {
return 'a is a number, b is a string';
}
fnPlain.signature = 'number, string';
var fn5 = typed(fnPlain);
// use the functions
console.log(fn1(2, 'foo')); // outputs 'a is a number, b is a string'
console.log(fn4(2)); // outputs 'a is a number'
// calling the function with a non-supported type signature will throw an error
try {
fn2('hello', 'world');
}
catch (err) {
console.log(err.toString());
// outputs: TypeError: Unexpected type of argument.
// Expected: number or boolean, actual: string, index: 1.
}
Types
typed-function has the following built-in types:
null
boolean
number
string
Function
Array
Date
RegExp
Object
The following type expressions are supported:
- Multiple arguments:
string, number, Function
- Union types:
number | string
- Variable arguments:
...number
- Any type:
any
API
Construction
A typed function can be constructed in two ways:
-
Create from an object with one or multiple signatures:
typed(signatures: Object.<string, function>) : function typed(name: string, signatures: Object.<string, function>) : function
-
Merge multiple typed functions into a new typed function:
typed(functions: ...function) : function typed(name: string, functions: ...function) : function
Each function in
functions
can be either a typed function created before, or a plain function having asignature
property.
Methods
-
typed.convert(value: *, type: string) : *
Convert a value to another type. Only applicable when conversions have been defined in
typed.conversions
(see section Properties). Example:typed.conversions.push({ from: 'number', to: 'string', convert: function (x) { return +x; }); var str = typed.convert(2.3, 'string'); // '2.3'
-
typed.create() : function
Create a new, isolated instance of typed-function. Example:
var typed = require('typed-function'); // default instance var typed2 = typed.create(); // a second instance
This would allow you, for example, to have two different type hierarchies for different purposes.
-
typed.find(fn: typed-function, signature: string | Array) : function | null
Find a specific signature from a typed function. The function currently only finds exact matching signatures.
For example:
var fn = typed(...); var f = typed.find(fn, ['number', 'string']); var f = typed.find(fn, 'number, string');
-
typed.addType(type: {name: string, test: function} [, beforeObjectTest=true]): void
Add a new type. A type object contains a name and a test function. The order of the types determines in which order function arguments are type-checked, so for performance it's important to put the most used types first. All types are added to the Array
typed.types
.Example:
function Person(...) { ... } Person.prototype.isPerson = true; typed.addType({ name: 'Person', test: function (x) { return x && x.isPerson === true; } });
By default, the new type will be inserted before the
Object
test because theObject
test also matches arrays and classes and hencetyped-function
would never reach the new type. WhenbeforeObjectTest
isfalse
, the new type will be added at the end of all tests. -
typed.addConversion(conversion: {from: string, to: string, convert: function}) : void
Add a new conversion. Conversions are added to the Array
typed.conversions
.typed.addConversion({ from: 'boolean', to: 'number', convert: function (x) { return +x; });
Note that any typed functions created before this conversion is added will not have their arguments undergo this new conversion automatically, so it is best to add all of your desired automatic conversions before defining any typed functions.
-
typed.createError(name: string, args: Array.<any>, signatures: Array.<Signature>): TypeError
Generates a custom error object reporting the problem with calling the typed function of the given
name
with the givensignatures
on the actual argumentsargs
. Note the error object has an extra propertydata
giving the details of the problem. This method is primarily useful in writing your own handler for a type mismatch (see thetyped.onMismatch
property below), in case you have tried to recover but end up deciding you want to throw the error that the default handler would have.
Properties
-
typed.types: Array.<{name: string, test: function}>
Array with types. Each object contains a type name and a test function. The order of the types determines in which order function arguments are type-checked, so for performance it's important to put the most used types first. Custom types can be added like:
function Person(...) { ... } Person.prototype.isPerson = true; typed.types.push({ name: 'Person', test: function (x) { return x && x.isPerson === true; } });
-
typed.conversions: Array.<{from: string, to: string, convert: function}>
An Array with built-in conversions. Empty by default. Can be used to define conversions from
boolean
tonumber
. For example:typed.conversions.push({ from: 'boolean', to: 'number', convert: function (x) { return +x; });
Also note the
addConversion()
method above for simply adding a single conversion at a time. -
typed.ignore: Array.<string>
An Array with names of types to be ignored when creating a typed function. This can be useful to filter signatures when creating a typed function. For example:
// a set with signatures maybe loaded from somewhere var signatures = { 'number': function () {...}, 'string': function () {...} } // we want to ignore a specific type typed.ignore = ['string']; // the created function fn will only contain the 'number' signature var fn = typed('fn', signatures);
-
typed.onMismatch: function
The handler called when a typed-function call fails to match with any of its signatures. The handler is called with three arguments: the name of the typed function being called, the actual argument list, and an array of the signatures for the typed function being called. (Each signature is an object with property 'signature' giving the actual signature and
property 'fn' giving the raw function for that signature.) The default value ofonMismatch
istyped.throwMismatchError
.This can be useful if you have a collection of functions and have common behavior for any invalid call. For example, you might just want to log the problem and continue:
const myErrorLog = []; typed.onMismatch = (name, args, signatures) => { myErrorLog.push(`Invalid call of ${name} with ${args.length} arguments.`); return null; }; typed.sqrt(9); // assuming definition as above, will return 3 typed.sqrt([]); // no error will be thrown; will return null. console.log(`There have been ${myErrorLog.length} invalid calls.`)
Note that there is only one
onMismatch
handler at a time; assigning a new value discards the previous handler. To restore the default behavior, just assigntyped.onMismatch = typed.throwMismatchError
.Finally note that this handler fires whenever any typed function call does not match any of its signatures. You can in effect define such a "handler" for a single typed function by simply specifying an implementation for the
...
signature:const lenOrNothing = typed({ string: s => s.length, '...': () => 0 }); console.log(lenOrNothing('Hello, world!')) // Output: 13 console.log(lenOrNothing(57, 'varieties')) // Output: 0
Recursion
The this
keyword can be used to self-reference the typed-function:
var sqrt = typed({
'number': function (value) {
return Math.sqrt(value);
},
'string': function (value) {
// on the following line we self reference the typed-function using "this"
return this(parseInt(value, 10));
}
});
// use the typed function
console.log(sqrt('9')); // output: 3
Output
The functions generated with typed({...})
have:
- A function
toString
. Returns well readable code which can be used to see what the function exactly does. Mostly for debugging purposes. - A property
signatures
, which holds a map with the (normalized) signatures as key and the original sub-functions as value. - A property
name
containing the name of the typed function, if it was assigned one at creation, or an empty string.
Roadmap
Version 2
- Be able to turn off exception throwing.
- Extend function signatures:
- Optional arguments like
'[number], array'
or likenumber=, array
- Nullable arguments like
'?Object'
- Optional arguments like
- Create a good benchmark, to get insight in the overhead.
- Allow conversions to fail (for example string to number is not always
possible). Call this
fallible
oroptional
?
Version 3
- Extend function signatures:
- Constants like
'"linear" | "cubic"'
,'0..10'
, etc. - Object definitions like
'{name: string, age: number}'
- Object definitions like
'Object.<string, Person>'
- Array definitions like
'Array.<Person>'
- Constants like
- Improve performance of both generating a typed function as well as the performance and memory footprint of a typed function.
Test
To test the library, run:
npm test
Minify
To generate the minified version of the library, run:
npm run minify
Publish
- Describe the changes in
HISTORY.md
- Increase the version number in
package.json
- Test and build:
npm install npm run build npm test
- Verify whether the bundle and minified bundle works correctly by opening
./test/browser.html
and./test/browser.min.html
in your browser. - Commit the changes
- Merge
develop
intomaster
, and pushmaster
- Create a git tag, and pus this
- publish the library:
npm publish