TypeScript transformer that generates run-time type-checks.
npm install typescript-istypescript-is is deprecated. It still works with TS 4.8 below, but it will not be updated.TypeScript transformer that generates run-time type-checks.

!node




!NpmLicense
``bash
npm install --save typescript-is
πΌ Use cases
If you've worked with TypeScript for a while, you know that sometimes you obtain
any or unknown data that is not type-safe.
You'd then have to write your own function with type predicates that checks the foreign object, and makes sure it is the type that you need.This library automates writing the type predicate function for you.
At compile time, it inspects the type you want to have checked, and generates a function that can check the type of a wild object at run-time.
When the function is invoked, it checks in detail if the given wild object complies with your favorite type.
In particular, you may obtain wild, untyped object, in the following situations:
* You're doing a
fetch call, which returns some JSON object.
You don't know if the JSON object is of the shape you expect.
* Your users are uploading a file, which is then read by your application and converted to an object.
You don't know if this object is really the type you expect.
* You're reading a JSON string from localStorage that you've stored earlier.
Perhaps in the meantime the string has been manipulated and is no longer giving you the object you expect.
* Any other case where you lose compile time type information...In these situations
typescript-is can come to your rescue.NOTE this package aims to generate type predicates for any serializable JavaScript object.
Please check What it won't do for details.
$3
* io-ts-transformer
* io-ts
* ts-auto-guard
ποΈ Configuration
This package exposes a TypeScript transformer factory at
typescript-is/lib/transformer-inline/transformerAs there currently is no way to configure the TypeScript compiler to use a transformer without using it programatically, the recommended way is to compile with ttypescript.
This is basically a wrapper around the TypeScript compiler that injects transformers configured in your
tsconfig.json.(please vote here to support transformers out-of-the-box: https://github.com/Microsoft/TypeScript/issues/14419)
Using ttypescript
First install
ttypescript:`bash
npm install --save-dev ttypescript
`Then make sure your
tsconfig.json is configured to use the typescript-is transformer:`json
{
"compilerOptions": {
"plugins": [
{ "transform": "typescript-is/lib/transform-inline/transformer" }
]
}
}
`Now compile using
ttypescript:`bash
npx ttsc
`$3
Please check the README of ttypescript for information on how to use it in combination with
ts-node, webpack, and Rollup.Note: This will not work if
ts-loader is configured with transpileOnly: true.Using with
webpack + ts-loader without ttypescriptIf you are using
ts-loader in a webpack project, you can use getCustomTransformers as suggested in #54.
This means you don't need to use ttypescript or write a custom compilation script.Example:
`javascript
const typescriptIsTransformer = require('typescript-is/lib/transform-inline/transformer').defaultmodule.exports = {
// I am hiding the rest of the webpack config
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.ts$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
loader: 'ts-loader',
options: {
getCustomTransformers: program => ({
before: [typescriptIsTransformer(program)]
})
}
}
]
}
};
`Note: This will not work if
ts-loader is configured with transpileOnly: true.Options
There are some options to configure the transformer.
| Property | Description |
|--|--|
|
shortCircuit | Boolean (default false). If true, all type guards will return true, i.e. no validation takes place. Can be used for example in production deployments where doing a lot of validation can cost too much CPU. |
| ignoreClasses | Boolean (default: false). If true, when the transformer encounters a class (except for Date), it will ignore it and simply return true. If false, an error is generated at compile time. |
| ignoreMethods | Boolean (default: false). If true, when the transformer encounters a method, it will ignore it and simply return true. If false, an error is generated at compile time. |
| ignoreFunctions (deprecated, use functionBehavior instead) | Boolean (default: false). If true, when the transformer encounters a function, it will ignore it and simply return true. If false, an error is generated at compile time. |
| functionBehavior | One of error, ignore, or basic (default: error). Determines the behavior of transformer when encountering a function. error will cause a compile-time error, ignore will cause the validation function to always return true, and basic will do a simple function-type-check. Overrides ignoreFunctions. |
| disallowSuperfluousObjectProperties | Boolean (default: false). If true, objects are checked for having superfluous properties and will cause the validation to fail if they do. If false, no check for superfluous properties is made. |
| transformNonNullExpressions | Boolean (default: false). If true, non-null expressions (eg. foo!.bar) are checked to not be null or undefined |
| emitDetailedErrors | Boolean or auto (default: auto). The generated validation functions can return detailed error messages, pointing out where and why validation failed. These messages are used by assertType, but are ignored by is. If false, validation functions return empty error messages, decreasing code size. auto will generate detailed error messages for assertions, but not for type checks. true will always generate detailed error messages, matching the behaviour of version 0.18.3 and older. |If you are using
ttypescript, you can include the options in your tsconfig.json:`json
{
"compilerOptions": {
"plugins": [
{
"transform": "typescript-is/lib/transform-inline/transformer",
"shortCircuit": true,
"ignoreClasses": true,
"ignoreMethods": true,
"functionBehavior": "ignore",
"disallowSuperfluousObjectProperties": true,
"transformNonNullExpressions": true,
"emitDetailedErrors": "auto"
}
]
}
}
`β How to use
Before using, please make sure you've completed configuring the transformer.
In your TypeScript code, you can now import and use the type-check function
is (or createIs), or the type assertion function assertType (or createAssertType).Validation (
is and createIs)For example, you can check if something is a
string or number and use it as such, without the compiler complaining:`typescript
import { is } from 'typescript-is';const wildString: any = 'a string, but nobody knows at compile time, because it is cast to
any';if (is(wildString)) { // returns true
// wildString can be used as string!
} else {
// never gets to this branch
}
if (is(wildString)) { // returns false
// never gets to this branch
} else {
// Now you know that wildString is not a number!
}
`You can also check your own interfaces:
`typescript
import { is } from 'typescript-is';interface MyInterface {
someObject: string;
without: string;
}
const foreignObject: any = { someObject: 'obtained from the wild', without: 'type safety' };
if (is(foreignObject)) { // returns true
const someObject = foreignObject.someObject; // type: string
const without = foreignObject.without; // type: string
}
`Assertions (
assertType and createAssertType)Or use the
assertType function to directly use the object:`typescript
import { assertType } from 'typescript-is';const object: any = 42;
assertType(object).toFixed(2); // "42.00"
try {
const asString = assertType(object); // throws error: object is not a string
asString.toUpperCasse(); // never gets here
} catch (error) {
// ...
}
`Decorators (
ValidateClass and AssertType)You can also use the decorators to automate validation in class methods.
To enable this functionality, you should make sure that experimental decorators are enabled for your TypeScript project.
`json
{
"compilerOptions": {
"experimentalDecorators": true
}
}
`You should also make sure the peer dependency reflect-metadata is installed.
`bash
npm install --save reflect-metadata
`You can then use the decorators:
`typescript
import { ValidateClass, AssertType } from 'typescript-is';@ValidateClass()
class A {
method(@AssertType() value: number) {
// You can safely use value as a number
return value;
}
}
new A().method(42) === 42; // true
new A().method('42' as any); // will throw error
`$3
AssertType can also work correctly with async methods, returning promise rejected with TypeGuardErrorTo enable this functionality, you need to emit decorators metadata for your TypeScript project.
`json
{
"compilerOptions": {
"emitDecoratorMetadata": true
}
}
`Then
AssertType will work with async methods and Promise returning methods automatically.
`typescript
import { ValidateClass, AssertType } from 'typescript-is';@ValidateClass()
class A {
async method(@AssertType({ async: true }) value: number) {
// You can safely use value as a number
return value;
}
methodPromise(@AssertType({ async: true }) value: number): Promise {
// You can safely use value as a number
return Promise.resolve(value);
}
}
new A().method(42).then(value => value === 42 / true /);
new A().method('42' as any).catch(error => {
// error will be of TypeGuardError type
})
new A().methodPromise('42' as any).catch(error => {
// error will be of TypeGuardError type
})
`If you want to throw synchronously for some reason, you can override the behaviour using with
@AssertType({ async: false }):
`typescript
import { ValidateClass, AssertType } from 'typescript-is';@ValidateClass()
class A {
async method(@AssertType({ async: false }) value: number) {
// You can safely use value as a number
return value;
}
}
new A().method(42).then(value => value === 42 / true /);
new A().method('42' as any); // will throw error
`If you cannot or don't want to enable decorators metadata, you still make AssertType reject with promise using
@AssertType({ async: true })
`typescript
import { ValidateClass, AssertType } from 'typescript-is';@ValidateClass()
class A {
async method(@AssertType({ async: true }) value: number) {
// You can safely use value as a number
return value;
}
}
`Strict equality (
equals, createEquals, assertEquals, createAssertEquals)This family of functions check not only whether the passed object is assignable to the specified type, but also checks that the passed object does not contain any more than is necessary. In other words: the type is also "assignable" to the object. This functionality is equivalent to specifying
disallowSuperfluousObjectProperties in the options, the difference is that this will apply only to the specific function call. For example:`typescript
import { equals } from 'typescript-is';interface X {
x: string;
}
equals({}); // false, because
x is missing
equals({ x: 'value' }); // true
equals({ x: 'value', y: 'another value' }); // false, because y is superfluous
`To see the declarations of the functions and more examples, please check out index.d.ts.
For many more examples, please check out the files in the test/ folder.
There you can find all the different types that are tested for.
β What it won't do
* This library aims to be able to check any serializable data.
* This library will not check functions. Function signatures are impossible to check at run-time.
* This library will not check classes (except the global
Date). Instead, you are encouraged to use the native instanceof operator. For example:`typescript
import { is } from 'typescript-is';class MyClass {
// ...
}
const instance: any = new MyClass();
is(instance); // error -> classes are not supported.
// Instead, use instanceof:
if (instance instanceof MyClass) {
// ...
}
`* This library will not magically check unbound type parameters. Instead, make sure all type parameters are bound to a well-defined type when invoking the
is function. For example:`typescript
import { is } from 'typescript-is';function magicalTypeChecker(object: any): object is T {
return is(object); // error -> type
T is not bound.
}
`If you stumble upon anything else that is not yet supported, please open an issue or submit a PR. π
πΊοΈ Road map
Features that are planned:
* Promise support. Something like
assertOrReject will either resolve(object) or reject(error).
* Optimize the generated conditions. Things like false || "key" === "key" can be simplified. Might be more interesting to publish a different library that can transform a TypeScript AST, and then use it here, or use an existing one. Might be out of scope, as there are plenty of minifiers/uglifiers/manglers out there already.π¨ Building and testing
`bash
git clone https://github.com/woutervh-/typescript-is.git
cd typescript-is/
npm installBuilding
npm run buildTesting
npm run test
``