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Library for working with Options in a type safe manner.

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typed-option

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Library for working with Options in a type safe manner.

tl;dr

Options makes working with, potentially, undefined values more concise and easy to read.

Example

Given the function:

function canFailFn(x: string): string | undefined {
  if (Math.random() > 0.5) {
    return x
  }
  return undefined
}

Turn something like this:

let result = 'FAILED'
const a = canFailFn('SUCCESS') // a is string | undefined
if (a) {
  const b = canFailFn(a) // b is string | undefined
  if (b) {
    const c = canFailFn(b) // c is string | undefined
    if (c) {
      result = c // c is string
    }
  }
}
console.log(result)

Into this:

import { Option } from 'typed-option'

const result2 = Option.from('SUCCESS')
  .map(v => canFailFn(v)) // v is of type string.
  .map(v => canFailFn(v)) // v is of type string.
  .map(v => canFailFn(v)) // v is of type string.
  .getOrElse('FAILED')
console.log(result2)

// or just
const result3 = Option.from('SUCCESS')
  .map(canFailFn)
  .map(canFailFn)
  .map(canFailFn)
  .getOrElse('FAILED')
console.log(result3)

Intro

An Option is either of type Some or None.

  • Some - represents a value of something (a defined value)
  • None - represents a value of nothing (an undefined value)

In the example above, we start with a Some('SUCCESS'). Then we apply the function canFailFn multiple times to the value of our Some. If the computation fails at any point, we are returned a None.

With Options, you do not need to know if you have a Some or None when applying functions. Only when you need the result do you have to deal with the potential None case. This is typically done by calling the .getOrElse function (as seen above).

Unions with undefined

One thing to note is that undefined is removed from union types:

interface Foo {
  a?: number
}
const myFoo: Foo = {
  a: 5
}
myFoo.a // 'number | undefined`'
const fooOption = Option.from(myFoo.a) // Option<number>
fooOption.map(a => a) // typeof a is number

This means that you will not have to worry about manually testing for undefined. A Some will never contain an undefined value.

Functions

Explanation

Option.from

Option.from gives you a None for undefined values and a Some for defined values.

Option.from(true) // Some(true)
Option.from(false) // Some(false)
Option.from({}) // Some({})
Option.from(0) // Some(0)
Option.from('') // Some('')
Option.from(undefined) // None

You can also pass an additional predicate of what a legal value is.

Option.from(false, () => true) // Some(false)
Option.from(true, () => false) // None
Option.from(undefined, () => true) // None

do

do runs a fn on a Option if it is of type Some. Similar to map, but does not alter/return a new Option.

some('world').do(text => console.log(text)) // logs: 'world'
none().do((text) => console.log(text)) // logs:

map

map apply a function to a Option if it is of type Some

some('world').map((text) => "Hello, " + text) // Some('Hello, world')
none().map((text) => "Hello, " + text) // None

flatMap

flatMap Same as map, but for when your function returns an Option. flatMap will remove the nested option.

function getOptionFn(...): Option<string>
const option = ... // Some('Hello, Option')
option.map(getOptionFn) // Some(Some('Hello, Option'))
option.flatMap(getOptionFn) // Some('Hello, Option')

getOrElse

getOrElse get the value from a Some or return the else value for a None

some(1).getOrElse(() => 999) // 1
none().getOrElse(() => 999) // 999
some(1).getOrElse(999) // 1
none().getOrElse(999) // 999

orElse

orElse is the same as getOrElse, but else returns an Option

some(1).orElse(() => Some(999)) // Some(1)
none().orElse(() => Some(999)) // Some(999)

filter

filter gives a predicate that a Some must hold. If not, returns None

some(1).filter((v) => false) // None()
some(100).filter((v) => true) // Some(100)
none().filter((v) => true) // None()

match

match gives a pattern matching looking syntax to work with options.

some(1).match({
  none: () => 'a none',
  some: v => `a Some(${v})`
}) // a Some(1)

none().match({
  none: () => 'a none',
  some: v => `a Some(${v})`
}) // a none

optionValueIgnored().match({
  none: 'failure',
  some: `success`
})

isNone & isSome

isNone tests if the given Option is of type None, isSome tests if the given Option is of type Some

const opt1 = ...
if(opt1.isNone()){
  // opt1 is None in this block
}
if(opt1.isSome()){
  // opt1 is Some in this block
}

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Library for working with Options in a type safe manner.

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