Skip to content

apokralipsa/ts-auto-guard

 
 

Repository files navigation

ts-auto-guard

Greenkeeper badge

Generate type guard functions from TypeScript interfaces

A tool for automatically generating TypeScript type guards for interfaces in your code base.

This tool aims to allow developers to verify data from untyped sources to ensure it conforms to TypeScript types. For example when initializing a data store or receiving structured data in an AJAX response.

Install

Yarn

$ yarn add -D ts-auto-guard

npm

$ npm install --save-dev ts-auto-guard

Usage

Annotate interfaces in your project. ts-auto-guard will generate guards only for interfaces with a @see {name} ts-auto-guard:type-guard JSDoc tag.

// my-project/Person.ts

/** @see {isPerson} ts-auto-guard:type-guard */
export interface Person {
  name: string
  age?: number
  children: Person[]
}

Run the CLI tool in the same folder as your project's tsconfig.json (optionally passing in paths to the files you'd like it to parse).

$ ts-auto-guard ./my-project/Person.ts

See generated files alongside your annotated files:

// my-project/Person.guard.ts

import { Person } from './Person'

export function isPerson(obj: any): obj is Person {
  return (
    typeof obj === 'object' &&
    typeof obj.name === 'string' &&
    (typeof obj.age === 'undefined' || typeof obj.age === 'number') &&
    Array.isArray(obj.children) &&
    obj.children.every(e => isPerson(e))
  )
}

Now use in your project:

// index.ts

import { Person } from './Person'
import { isPerson } from './Person.guard'

// Loading up an (untyped) JSON file
const person = require('./person.json')

if (isPerson(person)) {
  // Can trust the type system here because the object has been verified.
  console.log(`${person.name} has ${person.children.length} child(ren)`)
} else {
  console.error('Invalid person.json')
}

Debug mode

Use debug mode to help work out why your type guards are failing in development. This will change the output type guards to log the path, expected type and value of failing guards.

$ ts-auto-guard --debug
isPerson({ name: 20, age: 20 })
// stderr: "person.name type mismatch, expected: string, found: 20"

Short circuiting

ts-auto-guard also supports a shortcircuit flag that will cause all guards to always return true.

$ ts-auto-guard --shortcircuit="process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production'"

This will result in the following:

// my-project/Person.guard.ts

import { Person } from './Person'

export function isPerson(obj: any): obj is Person {
  if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production') {
    return true
  }
  return (
    typeof obj === 'object' &&
    // ...normal conditions
  )
}

Using the shortcircuit option in combination with uglify-js's dead_code and global_defs options will let you omit the long and complicated checks from your production code.

About

Generate type guard functions from TypeScript interfaces

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • TypeScript 92.3%
  • JavaScript 7.7%