ts-toolbelt
👷 Higher type safety for TypeScript
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Table of Contents
📜 About
ts-toolbelt is a collection of types that makes TypeScript even safer.
It's goal is to improve type correctness while adding a whole new set of
features to TypeScript.
It uses the type system itself for TypeScript to compute more complex types. In
other words, its API exposes types that trade CPU & RAM for higher type
safety.
ts-toolbelt completes TypeScript with a collection of more than 150
tested types.
Goals
- This package aims to be the home of all utility types
- High performance, so it will not bloat TS (max +4sec)
- Computed types are always readable, like if you typed it
- Software that's more type-safe, flexible & more robust
- Bring a whole new set of extra features to TypeScript
- Types can be combined together to create new ones!
🍩 Features
Here's some of the most useful features:
If you don't find the type you are looking for, you are welcome to open a feature request!
🏁 Getting Started
Prerequisites
This is important, the lowest TypeScript version that is supported is 3.5
npm install typescript@^3.5.0 --save
Installation
npm install ts-toolbelt --save
Hello World
import {A, B, C, F, I, N, O, S, T, U} from 'ts-toolbelt'
type merge = O.Merge<{name: string}, {age?: number}>
The project is organized around TypeScript's main concepts:
| | | | | |
---|
A(ny) | B(boolean) | C(lass) | F(unction) | I(teration) | N(umber) |
O(bject) | O(bject).P | S(tring) | T(uple) | U(nion) | Test |
The documentation is complete but needs more examples. So feel free to ask for
examples,
and I will update the docs.
Imports
There are many ways to import the types into your project:
-
Explicit
import {Any, Boolean, Class, Function, Iteration, Number, Object, String, Tuple, Union} from 'ts-toolbelt'
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Compact
import {A, B, C, F, I, N, O, S, T, U} from 'ts-toolbelt'
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Portable
import tb from 'ts-toolbelt'
Internal Docs
If you're interested to learn how the internals work, this tutorial will get
you on track to start writing your own types.
In this wiki, you'll find some extra resources for your learning & understanding.
It is incremental and it will be completed on demand, you can ask for this below.
Are you missing something? Participate to the open-wiki by posting your
questions right here.
🎁 Contributing
Contributions are what make the open source community such an amazing place to
learn, inspire, and create. Any contributions you make are greatly appreciated.
There are many ways to contribute to the project:
Codebase
- Improving existing documentation
- Adding new types to the collection
Pull Requests
- Read the tutorial
- Fork the project
- Clone your fork
- Create a pr/feature branch
git checkout -b pr/CoolFeature
- Commit your changes
git commit -m 'Added this CoolFeature'
- Run the tests
- Commit your changes
git push origin pr/CoolFeature
- Open a pull request
Sponsored issues have higher priority over non-critical issues.
You can either request a new feature or a bug fix then fund it.
The money will be transparently split with an issue's assignees.
💉 Running tests
For this project
To run the lint
& type
tests, simply run:
npm test
For your project
Want to test your own types? Let's get started:
import {A, B, C, F, I, N, O, S, T, U, Test} from 'ts-toolbelt'
const {checks, check} = Test
checks([
check<N.Plus<'1', '30'>, '31', Test.Pass>(),
check<N.Plus<'5', '-3'>, '2', Test.Pass>(),
])
Place it in a file that won't be executed, it's just for TypeScript to test types
🔧 Compatibility
The project is maintained to adapt to the constant
changes of TypeScript:
ts-toolbelt | typescript |
---|
1.x.x | ~3.5.x |
2.x.x | ^3.5.x |
3.x.x | ^3.5.x |
Major version numbers will upgrade whenever TypeScript had breaking changes (it
happened that TS had breaking changes on minor versions). Otherwise, the release
versions will naturally follow the semantic versioning.
🔮 What's next
🙏 Acknowledgements
Many, many thanks to all the
contributors and:
💟 Friendly Projects
utility-types
- Collection of utility types, complementing TypeScript built-in mapped types and aliases