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@itwin/presentation-shared
Advanced tools
The package contains types and utilities used across different iTwin.js Presentation packages.
Copyright © Bentley Systems, Incorporated. All rights reserved. See LICENSE.md for license terms and full copyright notice.
The @itwin/presentation-shared
package provides APIs shared across different Presentation packages.
Generally, it's expected for this package to be a regular dependency (not a peer) and it's types to possibly be exposed through other Presentation packages.
The APIs in this group provide access to iModels' EC metadata. For the most part, the package delivers only type definitions for different EC types and a couple of utility functions.
EC
namespaceThe namespace defines all the EC types that Presentation packages need. The types mostly replicate the ones from @itwin/ecschema-metadata
package, but provide an abstraction layer and, being interfaces rather than classes, better interoperability between packages and versions.
ECSchemaProvider
& getClass
ECSchemaProvider
is an interface for something that knows how to get an ECSchema from an iModel. The package itself doesn't provide an implementation for this interface and instead relies on @itwin/presentation-core-interop
to do that.
getClass
is an utility function that makes it easier to get an EC.Class
, given an ECSchemaProvider
and a full class name.
Example usage:
import { SchemaContext } from "@itwin/ecschema-metadata";
import { createECSchemaProvider } from "@itwin/presentation-core-interop";
import { ECSchemaProvider, getClass } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
const schemas = new SchemaContext();
const schemaProvider: ECSchemaProvider = createECSchemaProvider(schemas);
// get schema and a class from it
const ecSchema = await schemaProvider.getSchema("MySchema");
const ecClassFromSchema = await ecSchema.getClass("MyClass");
// ... or use the `getClass` utility to get straight to the class
const ecClassFromUtility = await getClass(schemaProvider, "MySchema.MyClass");
ECClassHierarchyInspector
& createCachingECClassHierarchyInspector
ECClassHierarchyInspector
is an interface for something that knows how to check whether one EC.Class
derives from another. While that can be achieved through ECSchemaProvider
by getting an EC.Class
and calling its is
method, using this interface provides a more streamlined and, possibly, more efficient way to do the check. In addition, the ECClassHierarchyInspector.classDerivesFrom
returns a Promise<boolean> | boolean
, which lets the implementation return the result synchronously, if it's already known.
createCachingECClassHierarchyInspector
is a factory method that creates ECClassHierarchyInspector
instance that uses a LRU cache to store the check results. In Presentation library use cases, class inheritance checks are done very frequently to warrant caching these results.
Example usage:
import { createCachingECClassHierarchyInspector, ECClassHierarchyInspector } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
const classHierarchyInspector: ECClassHierarchyInspector = createCachingECClassHierarchyInspector({
// provide `ECSchemaProvider` that will be used to access iModels schemas
schemaProvider: getMetadataProvider(),
// tell how many entries should be cached in LRU cache (0 or `undefined` stand for "no caching")
cacheSize: 100,
});
const isGeometricElement = await classHierarchyInspector.classDerivesFrom("MySchema.MyClass", "BisCore.GeometricElement");
The APIs in ECSql group provide an abstraction layer over ECSQL query reader API on the backend and on the frontend.
ECSqlQueryExecutor
& related APIsECSqlBinding
is a union of type / value pairs for binding the values to parametrized ECSQL queries.
ECSqlQueryDef
defines the query content: ctes, ecsql
that contains the ECSQL query itself and the bindings (values) for parameters in the query.
ECSqlQueryReaderOptions
is a subset of QueryOptions and allows configuring how the query is run.
ECSqlQueryRow
matches QueryRowProxy and allows accessing the results by index (when row format is Indexes
) or by name (when row format is ECSqlPropertyNames
).
ECSqlQueryExecutor
is an interface for a query executor that takes ECSqlQueryDef
with ECSqlQueryReaderOptions
and returns ECSqlQueryRow
objects. The package itself doesn't provide an implementation for this interface and instead relies on @itwin/presentation-core-interop
to do that.
Example usage:
import { IModelDb } from "@itwin/core-backend";
import { createECSqlQueryExecutor } from "@itwin/presentation-core-interop";
import { ECSqlQueryExecutor } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
const imodel: IModelDb = getIModelDb();
const queryExecutor = createECSqlQueryExecutor(imodel);
const queryReader = queryExecutor.createQueryReader(
{
ecsql: "SELECT * FROM BisCore.Element WHERE UserLabel = ?",
bindings: [{ type: "string", value: "My element" }],
},
{
rowFormat: "ECSqlPropertyNames",
},
);
for await (const row of reader) {
const instanceId = row["ECInstanceId"];
const codeValue = row["CodeValue"];
}
The ECSql utilities group contains a number of functions to help create complex ECSQL queries. All the functions in this group are exported under the ECSql
namespace.
createNullableSelector
- creates a clause for returning NULL
when checkSelector
returns a falsy value, or result of valueSelector
otherwise.
Example usage:
import { ECSql } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
const result = ECSql.createNullableSelector({ checkSelector: "CHECK_SELECTOR", valueSelector: "VALUE_SELECTOR" });
// result = "IIF(CHECK_SELECTOR, VALUE_SELECTOR, NULL)"
createRawPropertyValueSelector
- creates an ECSQL selector for raw property value, or, optionally - it's component.
Example usage:
import { ECSql } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
const result = ECSql.createRawPropertyValueSelector("CLASS_ALIAS", "POINT_PROPERTY", "X");
// result = "[CLASS_ALIAS].[POINT_PROPERTY].[X]"
createRawPrimitiveValueSelector
- creates an ECSQL selector for a raw primitive value.
undefined
is selected as NULL
.Date
values are selected in julian day format.Point2d
and Point3d
values are selected as serialized JSON objects, e.g. { x: 1, y: 2, z: 3 }
.Example usage:
import { ECSql } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
const result = ECSql.createRawPrimitiveValueSelector("STRING VALUE");
// result = "'STRING VALUE'"
createPrimitivePropertyValueSelectorProps
- creates TypedValueSelectClauseProps
for selecting a primitive property value, while also
accounting for the property type. The created props may be used when creating ConcatenatedValue
selectors (see createConcatenatedValueJsonSelector
and createConcatenatedValueStringSelector
).
Example usage:
import { ECSql } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
const categoryRankSelectorProps = ECSql.createPrimitivePropertyValueSelectorProps({
schemaProvider,
propertyClassAlias: "x",
propertyClassName: "BisCore.Category",
propertyName: "Rank",
});
// categoryRankSelectorProps = { selector: "[x].[Rank]", type: "Integer" }
// Now we can use the result to create a `ConcatenatedValue` selector:
const selector = ECSql.createConcatenatedValueJsonSelector(["Rank: ", categoryRankSelectorProps]);
// selector = `json_array('Rank: ', json_object('selector', '[x].[Rank]', 'type', 'Integer'))`
createInstanceKeySelector
- creates an ECSQL selector for a serialized InstanceKey
JSON object.
Example usage:
import { ECSql } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
const result = ECSql.createInstanceKeySelector({ alias: "x" });
// result = "json_object('className', ec_classname([x].[ECClassId], 's.c'), 'id', IdToHex([x].[ECInstanceId]))"
createConcatenatedValueJsonSelector
- creates an ECSQL selector for a ConcatenatedValue
. This allows handling results of each value selector individually when parsing query result.
Example usage:
import { ECSql } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
const selector = ECSql.createConcatenatedValueJsonSelector([
{
selector: "my_class.MyProperty",
},
{
value: 123.456,
type: "Double",
},
]);
// selector = `json_array(
// my_class.MyProperty,
// json_object(
// 'value', 123.456,
// 'type', 'Double'
// )
// )`
const queryReader = queryExecutor.createQueryReader(
{
ecsql: `SELECT ${selector} FROM MySchema.MyClass AS my_class`,
},
{
rowFormat: "Indexes",
},
);
for await (const row of reader) {
const value: ConcatenatedValue = JSON.parse(row[0]);
}
createConcatenatedValueStringSelector
- creates an ECSQL selector combined of multiple typed value selectors in a form of a string.
Example usage:
import { ECSql } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
const selector = ECSql.createConcatenatedValueStringSelector([
{
selector: "my_class.MyProperty",
},
{
value: 123.456,
type: "Double",
},
]);
// selector = `CAST(my_class.MyProperty AS TEXT) || '123.456'`
const queryReader = queryExecutor.createQueryReader(
{
ecsql: `SELECT ${selector} FROM MySchema.MyClass AS my_class`,
},
{
rowFormat: "Indexes",
},
);
for await (const row of reader) {
const value: string = row[0];
}
createRelationshipPathJoinClause
- creates an ECSQL JOIN snippet for given relationships' path.
Example usage:
import { ECSql } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
const selector = ECSql.createRelationshipPathJoinClause({
schemaProvider,
path: [
{
sourceAlias: "my_source",
sourceClassName: "MySchema.MySourceClass",
relationshipAlias: "my_relationship",
relationshipName: "MySchema.MyRelationship",
targetAlias: "my_target",
targetClassName: "MySchema.MyTargetClass",
joinType: "inner",
},
],
});
// selector = `
// INNER JOIN [MySchema].[MyRelationship] [my_relationship] ON [my_relationship].[SourceECInstanceId] = [my_source].[ECInstanceId]`
// INNER JOIN [MySchema].[MyTargetClass] [my_target] ON [my_target].[ECInstanceId] = [my_relationship].[TargetECInstanceId]
// `
The APIs in Values group contain various value types and utilities to work with them.
InstanceKey
- a pair of full ECClass name and ECInstance ID, uniquely identifying an ECInstance in an iModel.
PrimitiveValue
- a union of different supported primitive values. Also, a namespace, containing the following utilities:
isPoint2d
- type guard to check if the given PrimitiveValue
is a Point2d
.isPoint3d
- type guard to check if the given PrimitiveValue
is a Point3d
.TypedPrimitiveValue
- a union of all supported combinations of PrimitiveValue
and its type, possibly with some extra metadata like extended type name or units-related information. Also, a namespace, containing the following utilities:
create
- given a PrimitiveValue
, its type and, optionally, extra information, validates the input and creates a TypedPrimitiveValue
.ConcatenatedValuePart
- a union of different types that may be used to create a single, combined value: nested ConcatenatedValue
, TypedPrimitiveValue
or just plain string. Also, a namespace, containing the following utilities:
isString
- type guard to check if the given ConcatenatedValuePart
is a string
.isPrimitive
- type guard to check if the given ConcatenatedValuePart
is a TypedPrimitiveValue
.ConcatenatedValue
- an array of ConcatenatedValuePart
. Also, a namespace containing the following utilities:
serialize
- joins the given ConcatenatedValue
parts using provided formatter and separator.IPrimitiveValueFormatter
- an interface for a function that knows how to format a TypedPrimitiveValue
into a string.
createDefaultValueFormatter
- a factory method that creates an IPrimitiveValueFormatter
for formatting values into a user-friendly, but units-agnostic format. This is a good fallback, but for iTwin.js applications it's expected that a units aware formatter from @itwin/presentation-core-interop
package is used.
formatConcatenatedValue
- an utility function, built on top of ConcatenatedValue.serialize
, to serialize ConcatenatedValue
into a string, but in this case - using the given IPrimitiveValueFormatter
.
IInstanceLabelSelectClauseFactory
is an interface for something that knows how to create an ECSQL selector for a label. The selector should be injected straight into an ECSQL query:
const ecsql = `SELECT ${await factory.createSelectClause({ classAlias: "element" })} AS [Label] FROM [BisCore].[Element] AS [element]`;
The generated label is expected to always be of string type, but it may be a serialized JSON string, representing a ConcatenatedValue
.
parseInstanceLabel
utility function may be used to parse the label from query results, taking into account the possibility for the label to be either a string or a ConcatenatedValue
. For example, the label from above query may be parsed like this:
import { ConcatenatedValue, parseInstanceLabel } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
for await (const row of queryExecutor.createQueryReader({ ecsql }, { rowFormat: "ECSqlPropertyNames" })) {
const label: string | ConcatenatedValue = parseInstanceLabel(row["Label"]);
// see `formatConcatenatedValue` for creating a formatted label string from the above
}
The package delivers 3 implementations of IInstanceLabelSelectClauseFactory
that can be created using the following factory methods: createDefaultInstanceLabelSelectClauseFactory
, createClassBasedInstanceLabelSelectClauseFactory
, createBisInstanceLabelSelectClauseFactory
.
createDefaultInstanceLabelSelectClauseFactory
This label selectors factory creates instance labels in the form of Class label [base36(briefcase id)-base36(local id)]
, where local and briefcase IDs are calculated based on ECInstance ID:
{briefcase id} = ECInstanceId >> 40
,{local id} = ECInstanceId & (1 << 40 - 1)
.This kind of label is a good fallback for when no better label can be produced - every ECInstance in an iModel always has an ECClass and an ECInstance ID and the combination of the two is guaranteed to be unique, which guarantees a unique instance label.
Example usage:
import { createDefaultInstanceLabelSelectClauseFactory } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
const labelsFactory = createDefaultInstanceLabelSelectClauseFactory();
const ecsql = `SELECT ${await labelsFactory.createSelectClause({ classAlias: "element" })} AS [Label] FROM [BisCore].[Element] AS [element]`;
// ...
createClassBasedInstanceLabelSelectClauseFactory
This label selectors factory doesn't create labels on its own, but allows assigning different selectors based on ECClass. This is convenient when different classes have different rules for calculating labels of their instances.
Example usage:
import { createClassBasedInstanceLabelSelectClauseFactory, ECClassHierarchyInspector } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
const classHierarchyInspector: ECClassHierarchyInspector = getClassHierarchyInspector();
const labelsFactory = createClassBasedInstanceLabelSelectClauseFactory({
classHierarchyInspector,
clauses: [
{
className: "MySchema.MyClass",
clause: ({ classAlias }) => ({ selector: `[${classAlias}].[MyLabelProperty]` }),
},
{
className: "BisCore.GeometricElement",
clause: () => ({ value: "Geometric element", type: "String" }),
},
{
className: "BisCore.Element",
clause: ({ classAlias }) => ({ selector: `'Element: ' || [${classAlias}].[CodeValue]` }),
},
],
});
const ecsql = `SELECT ${await labelsFactory.createSelectClause({ classAlias: "element" })} AS [Label] FROM [BisCore].[Element] AS [element]`;
// ...
createBisInstanceLabelSelectClauseFactory
This label selectors factory creates labels according to BIS instance label rules. It's the recommended factory to use when consistent labels are needed across iTwin.js applications.
Example usage:
import { createBisInstanceLabelSelectClauseFactory, ECClassHierarchyInspector } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
const classHierarchyInspector: ECClassHierarchyInspector = getClassHierarchyInspector();
const labelsFactory = createBisInstanceLabelSelectClauseFactory({ classHierarchyInspector });
const ecsql = `SELECT ${await labelsFactory.createSelectClause({ classAlias: "element" })} AS [Label] FROM [BisCore].[Element] AS [element]`;
// ...
The APIs in logging category define types and interfaces required for creating a logger. The package itself only delivers a NOOP_LOGGER
, which does what it says - nothing. Besides that, we expect the @itwin/presentation-core-interop
package to be used for creating a logger that forwards all logging to iTwin.js Logger
.
Example usage:
import { Logger as ITwinJsLogger } from "@itwin/core-bentley";
import { createLogger } from "@itwin/presentation-core-interop";
import { ILogger } from "@itwin/presentation-shared";
import { setLogger as setHierarchiesLogger } from "@itwin/presentation-hierarchies";
// create an `ILogger` from iTwin.js `Logger`
const logger: ILogger = createLogger(ITwinJsLogger);
// the logger may be used directly
logger.logInfo("MyApp.Feature", "This is a log message");
// it may also be passed to other Presentation packages which will then use it for logging
setHierarchiesLogger(logger);
The package also delivers a number of utility types and functions:
ArrayElement
- given an array, constructs a type of the array item:
type MyArray = Array<number>;
type MyArrayItem = ArrayElement<MyArray>; // number
OmitOverUnion
- similar to TypeScript's Omit
, but also works on union types:
type MyUnionType = { x: number; y: string } | { y: string; z: boolean };
type MyUnionWithoutY = OmitOverUnion<MyUnionType, "y">; // { x: number } | { z: boolean }
normalizeFullClassName
- given a full class name with a schema - class names' separator being either :
or .
, returns a full class name with .
separator:
// returns "BisCore.Element"
const normalizedClassName = normalizeFullClassName("BisCore:Element");
parseFullClassName
- given a full class name with a schema - class names' separator being either :
or .
, returns a parsed object with schema and class names separated:
// returns `{ schemaName: "BisCore", className: "Element" }`
const { schemaName, className } = parseFullClassName("BisCore:Element");
trimWhitespace
- trims all extra whitespace from the given string, including:
julianToDateTime
- converts a julian date to a JavaScript Date
object.
releaseMainThread
- returns a promise that immediately resolves. Awaiting on the returned promise releases the main thread and allows other tasks to run.
createMainThreadReleaseOnTimePassedHandler
- returns a releaseMainThread
promise if the given amount of time has passed since the handler was created or the main thread was last released using this handler. Otherwise, returns undefined
.
const releaseMainThread = createMainThreadReleaseOnTimePassedHandler();
for (const value of someVeryLargeArray) {
await releaseMainThread();
// do something with value
}
FAQs
The package contains types and utilities used across different iTwin.js Presentation packages.
The npm package @itwin/presentation-shared receives a total of 3,102 weekly downloads. As such, @itwin/presentation-shared popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @itwin/presentation-shared demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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