
Security News
Software Engineering Daily Podcast: Feross on AI, Open Source, and Supply Chain Risk
Socket CEO Feross Aboukhadijeh joins Software Engineering Daily to discuss modern software supply chain attacks and rising AI-driven security risks.
Hooks as you want
Documentation for TS-Hooks
Create your own hooks like add validation before some function called, or trigger some stuff when the function called in every code as you want
npm install ts-hooks
yarn add ts-hooks
Idea behind ts-hooks is to wrap your function into wrapper function, are you confuse ? yeah me too :D , don't worry, let's see the example below
Your function before wrapped
function iDontKnowTheName() {
console.log("Hey i don't what should i do!")
}
Your function after wrapped by ts-hooks
function functionWrapper() {
hooksBefore()
const result = iDontKnowTheName()
hooksAfter()
return result
}
if you're not understand with the basic concept above, don't worry just forget it, let's see how to use the ts-hooks
:warning: Important! ts-hooks can be used only when your functions are inside a class
/**
* add hooks before target function called
* NOTE : you can pass the Async hooks to the sync function, but
* your hooks will not awaited
* the first argument is array of hooks that will be called before the original function called
* the second argument is array of hooks that will be called after the original function called
* the last argument is optional, if you set it to `true` then the hooks function will
* executed like middleware, otherwise the hooks will executed like common function
*/
@addHooks([firstSyncHook], [], false)
syncFunctionsWithHookBefore() {
console.log(
'this is the target function with single hook before this function called'
)
}
and the firstSyncHook must be a function like this
function firstSyncHook() {
console.log('this is first synchronous hooks')
}
/**
* add hooks after target function called
*/
@addHooks([], [firstSyncHook], false)
syncFunctionWithHookAfter() {
console.log(
'this is the target function with single hook after this function called'
)
}
/**
* add multiple hooks as much as you want,
* the ordering are matters
* in this case, `firstSyncHook` will executed first and after it done
* the `secondSyncHook` will be executed
*/
@addHooks([firstSyncHook, secondSyncHook], [], false)
syncFunctionWithMultipleHooks() {
console.log('this is the target function with multiple hooks')
}
/**
* you can pass params just like a common functions
* and your hooks will have same params like the target function
*/
@addHooks([hookWithParams], [], false)
functionWithHooksAndParams(param1: string, param2: number) {
console.log(
`this is the target function with hooks and params :{${param1} ${param2}} `
)
}
and the hookWithParam must be a function like this
function hookWithParams(param1: string, param2: number) {
console.log(`this is synchronous hooks with params:{ ${param1} ${param2} }`)
}
/**
* if your hooks are throwing an error, the next step will not executed
* because hooks are run synchronously
*/
@addHooks([hookWithError], [], false)
functionWithErrorHook() {
console.log('This statement will not executed')
}
We can add some hooks to async function too, yeay !
/**
* you can also handle the async function with hooks,
* and you can also pass the sync or Async hook to the Async function
* it will work fine :D
*/
@addAsyncHooks([firstAsyncHook], [], false)
async functionWithAsyncHook() {
console.log('Yeay we can handle async function too :D !!')
}
/**
* this function are same like the Async function above
*/
@addAsyncHooks([firstAsyncHook], [], false)
functionWhichReturnPromise() {
return new Promise(resolve => {
setTimeout(() => resolve('Yeay we can handle this too !!'))
})
}
}
:warning: Warning !!! this features maybe unstable
ts-hooks v.0.1.0-rc3 is already support the middleware concept, you can use it like middleware in express.js (see express middleware) the middleware concept will provide a next callback to your hooks function, if in your hooks function you called the next() callback it will execute the next process/function depends on the process/function stack
if you set your hooks like this
@addHooks([hookAsMiddleware], [], true)
functionWithHookAsMiddleware(param1: string) {
console.log('this is origin function with params : ', param1)
}
then the hookAsMiddleware must be a function like this
/**
* import next type from `ts-hooks`
*/
import { Next } from 'ts-hooks'
/**
* remember that the first param of hook in middleware concept is always
* `next`, and the next params is depends to the target function
*
* @param next callback function, if you invoked this callback, then the next process will be executed
* otherwise the next process will not be executed
* @param param1 this param is depend to the target function
*/
function hookAsMiddleware(next: Next, param1: string) {
console.log(
'this is hook function that implement middleware concept with params : ',
param1
)
/**
* you can override the params that will be retrieved in the next process/function
*/
next('override params from hooks')
}
and if you execute it, it should be like this
this is hook function that implement middleware concept with params : origin params
this is origin function with params : override params from hooks
ts-hooks has a process stack or sequence of processes that will be executed, and it will be like this
firstHooksBefore <- if this error, then the next process(secondHooksBefore, originFunction, etc) will not be executed, and returned value will be undefined/null
secondHooksBefore
originFunction
firstHooksAfter
secondHooksAfter
if you're using the middleware concept, the process stack will be like this
firstHooksBefore <- if this error or the next() callback is not called, then the next process(secondHooksBefore, originFunction, etc) will not be executed, and returned value will be undefined/null
secondHooksBefore
originFunction
firstHooksAfter
secondHooksAfter
for full example you can look at the example folder in this repository,
hope this repository can help you guys :blush:
FAQs
Hooks as you want
The npm package ts-hooks receives a total of 178 weekly downloads. As such, ts-hooks popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that ts-hooks demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Security News
Socket CEO Feross Aboukhadijeh joins Software Engineering Daily to discuss modern software supply chain attacks and rising AI-driven security risks.

Security News
GitHub has revoked npm classic tokens for publishing; maintainers must migrate, but OpenJS warns OIDC trusted publishing still has risky gaps for critical projects.

Security News
Rust’s crates.io team is advancing an RFC to add a Security tab that surfaces RustSec vulnerability and unsoundness advisories directly on crate pages.