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@solana/options
Advanced tools
Managing and serializing Rust-like Option types in JavaScript
This package allows us to manage and serialize Rust-like Option types in JavaScript. It can be used standalone, but it is also exported as part of the Solana JavaScript SDK @solana/web3.js@experimental
.
This package is also part of the @solana/codecs
package which acts as an entry point for all codec packages as well as for their documentation.
In Rust, we define optional values as an Option<T>
type which can either be Some(T)
or None
. This is usually represented as T | null
in the JavaScript world. The issue with this approach is it doesn't work with nested options. For instance, an Option<Option<T>>
in Rust would become a T | null | null
in JavaScript which is equivalent to T | null
. That means, there is no way for us to represent the Some(None)
value in JavaScript or any other nested option.
To solve this issue, this library provides an Option<T>
union type that works very similarly to the Rust Option<T>
type. It is defined as follows:
type Option<T> = Some<T> | None;
type Some<T> = { __option: 'Some'; value: T };
type None = { __option: 'None' };
To improve the developer experience, helper functions are available to help you create options. The type T
of the option can either be inferred by TypeScript or explicitly provided.
// Create an option with a value.
some('Hello World');
some<number | string>(123);
// Create an empty option.
none();
none<number | string>();
This library also provides helper functions to help us identify and manage Option
types.
For instance, you can use the isSome
and isNone
type guards to check whether a given Option
is of the desired type.
isSome(some('Hello World')); // true
isSome(none()); // false
isNone(some('Hello World')); // false
isNone(none()); // true
If you are given a type T | null
, you may also use the wrapNullable
helper function to transform it into an Option<T>
type.
wrapNullable('Hello world'); // Some<string>
wrapNullable(null); // None
Several helpers are available to help you unwrap your options and access their potential value. For instance, the unwrapOption
function transforms an Option<T>
type into T
if the value exits and null
otherwise.
unwrapOption(some('Hello World')); // "Hello World"
unwrapOption(none()); // null
If null
isn’t the value you want to use for None
options, you may provide a custom fallback function as the second argument. Its return value will be assigned to None
options.
unwrapOption(some('Hello World'), () => 'Default'); // "Hello World"
unwrapOption(none(), () => 'Default'); // "Default"
Note that this unwrapOption
function does not recursively unwrap nested options. You may use the unwrapOptionRecursively
function for that purpose instead.
unwrapOptionRecursively(some(some(some('Hello World')))); // "Hello World"
unwrapOptionRecursively(some(some(none<string>()))); // null
The unwrapOptionRecursively
function also walks any object and array it encounters and recursively unwraps any option it identifies in its journey without mutating any object or array.
unwrapOptionRecursively({
a: 'hello',
b: none(),
c: [{ c1: some(42) }, { c2: none() }],
});
// { a: "hello", b: null, c: [{ c1: 42 }, { c2: null }] }
The unwrapOptionRecursively
also accepts a fallback function as a second argument to provide custom values for None
options.
unwrapOptionRecursively(
{
a: 'hello',
b: none(),
c: [{ c1: some(42) }, { c2: none() }],
},
() => 'Default',
);
// { a: "hello", b: "Default", c: [{ c1: 42 }, { c2: "Default" }] }
The getOptionCodec
function behaves exactly the same as the getNullableCodec
except that it encodes Option<T>
types instead of T | null
types.
Namely, it accepts a codec of type T
and returns a codec of type Option<T>
. It stores whether or not the item exists as a boolean prefix using a u8
by default.
getOptionCodec(getStringCodec()).encode(some('Hi'));
// 0x01020000004869
// | | └-- utf8 string content ("Hi").
// | └-- u32 string prefix (2 characters).
// └-- 1-byte prefix (Some).
getOptionCodec(getStringCodec()).encode(none());
// 0x00
// └-- 1-byte prefix (None).
You may provide a number codec as the prefix
option of the getOptionCodec
function to configure how to store the boolean prefix.
const u32OptionStringCodec = getOptionCodec(getStringCodec(), {
prefix: getU32Codec(),
});
u32OptionStringCodec.encode(some('Hi'));
// 0x01000000020000004869
// └------┘ 4-byte prefix (Some).
u32OptionStringCodec.encode(none());
// 0x00000000
// └------┘ 4-byte prefix (None).
Additionally, if the item is a FixedSizeCodec
, you may set the fixed
option to true
to also make the returned option codec a FixedSizeCodec
. To do so, it will pad null
values with zeroes to match the length of existing values.
const fixedOptionStringCodec = getOptionCodec(
getStringCodec({ size: 8 }), // Only works with fixed-size items.
{ fixed: true },
);
fixedOptionStringCodec.encode(some('Hi'));
// 0x014869000000000000
// | └-- 8-byte utf8 string content ("Hi").
// └-- 1-byte prefix (Some).
fixedOptionStringCodec.encode(none());
// 0x000000000000000000
// | └-- 8-byte of padding to make a fixed-size codec.
// └-- 1-byte prefix (None).
Separate getOptionEncoder
and getOptionDecoder
functions are also available.
const bytes = getOptionEncoder(getStringEncoder()).encode(some('Hi'));
const value = getOptionDecoder(getStringDecoder()).decode(bytes);
To read more about the available codecs and how to use them, check out the documentation of the main @solana/codecs
package.
FAQs
Managing and serializing Rust-like Option types in JavaScript
The npm package @solana/options receives a total of 208,702 weekly downloads. As such, @solana/options popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @solana/options demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 14 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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