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tuple-result
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A minimal, functional, and tree-shakable Result library for TypeScript that prioritizes simplicity and serialization
tuple-result is a minimal, functional, and tree-shakable Result library for TypeScript that prioritizes simplicity and serialization.
Build a minimal, functional Result library that prioritizes simplicity and serialization. While libraries like ts-results and neverthrow offer robust features, their class-based implementations can create challenges with serialization and bundle size. tuple-result provides a functional alternative using simple arrays - combining minimal overhead (~150B core), easy serialization for APIs and frameworks like React Router, and helper functions while adhering to the KISS principle.
tuple-result provides a simple approach to error handling. Here's how to use it:
import { Err, Ok } from 'tuple-result';
const success = Ok(42);
const failure = Err('Something went wrong');
// Method-based approach
if (success.isOk()) {
console.log(success.value); // 42
}
// Array destructuring approach
const [ok, error, value] = success;
if (ok) {
console.log(value); // 42
}
// Direct unwrapping (throws on error)
const value = success.unwrap(); // 42
import { t, tAsync } from 'tuple-result';
// Wrap synchronous functions
const result = t(() => JSON.parse('invalid')); // Err(SyntaxError)
// Wrap promises
const asyncResult = await tAsync(fetch('/api/data')); // Ok(Response) or Err(Error)
import { unwrapErr, unwrapOr } from 'tuple-result';
// Provide defaults
const value = unwrapOr(failure, 0); // 0
import { mapErr, mapOk } from 'tuple-result';
// Transform success values
const doubled = mapOk(success, (x) => x * 2); // Ok(84)
// Transform errors
const wrapped = mapErr(failure, (e) => `Error: ${e}`); // Err('Error: Something went wrong')
// Convert to serializable format
const serialized = success.toArray(); // [true, undefined, 42]
// Reconstruct from serialized format
const reconstructed = fromArray(serialized); // Back to TResult with methods
Ok<T, E>(value: T): OkResult<T, E>Creates a successful result containing the given value.
const result = Ok(42);
console.log(result.unwrap()); // 42
console.log(result.isOk()); // true
Err<T, E>(error: E): ErrResult<T, E>Creates an error result containing the given error.
const result = Err('Something went wrong');
console.log(result.isErr()); // true
console.log(result.error); // 'Something went wrong'
isOk<T, E>(result: TResult<T, E>): result is OkResult<T, E>Type guard to check if a result is successful.
if (isOk(result)) {
// TypeScript knows result is OkResult here
console.log(result.unwrap());
}
isErr<T, E>(result: TResult<T, E>): result is ErrResult<T, E>Type guard to check if a result is an error.
if (isErr(result)) {
// TypeScript knows result is ErrResult here
console.log(result.error);
}
unwrap<T, E>(result: TResult<T, E>): TExtracts the value from a result, throwing if it's an error.
try {
const value = unwrap(success); // 42
} catch (error) {
// Handle error
}
unwrapOk<T, E>(result: TResult<T, E>): TExtracts the value from an Ok result, throwing if it's an error.
const value = unwrapOk(success); // 42
unwrapErr<T, E>(result: TResult<T, E>): EExtracts the error from an Err result, throwing if it's successful.
const error = unwrapErr(failure); // 'Something went wrong'
unwrapOr<T, E>(result: TResult<T, E>, defaultValue: T): TExtracts the value from a result, returning a default if it's an error.
const value = unwrapOr(failure, 0); // 0
unwrapOrNull<T, E>(result: TResult<T, E>): T | nullExtracts the value from a result, returning null if it's an error.
const value = unwrapOrNull(failure); // null
mapOk<T, E, U>(result: TResult<T, E>, mapFn: (value: T) => U): TResult<U, E>Maps the value inside an Ok result using the provided function.
const doubled = mapOk(Ok(21), (x) => x * 2); // Ok(42)
mapErr<T, E, F>(result: TResult<T, E>, mapFn: (error: E) => F): TResult<T, F>Maps the error inside an Err result using the provided function.
const wrapped = mapErr(Err(404), (code) => `HTTP ${code}`); // Err('HTTP 404')
t<T, Args extends any[]>(fn: (...args: Args) => T, ...args: Args): TResult<T, unknown>Wraps a synchronous function call in a Result.
const result = t(() => JSON.parse('invalid')); // Err(SyntaxError)
const safeDivide = (a: number, b: number) => t(() => a / b, a, b);
tAsync<T>(promise: Promise<T>): Promise<TResult<T, unknown>>Wraps a Promise in a Result.
const result = await tAsync(fetch('/api/data')); // Ok(Response) or Err(Error)
toArray() (Instance Method)Converts a result to a plain array for serialization.
const result = Ok(42);
const serialized = result.toArray(); // [true, undefined, 42]
fromArray<T, E>(array: TResultArray<T, E>): TResult<T, E>Creates a result instance from a plain array.
const result = fromArray([true, undefined, 42]); // Ok(42) with methods
TResult and TResultArray?TResultArray is a subset of TResult - same array structure, but TResult adds convenience methods.
TResult: Full-featured classes with .isOk(), .unwrap(), .value methodsTResultArray: Plain arrays perfect for serialization (React Router, APIs, JSON)Key benefit: All helper functions work with both types seamlessly.
const classResult = Ok('hello');
const arrayResult = [true, undefined, 'hello'] as const;
isOk(classResult); // ✅ works
isOk(arrayResult); // ✅ also works
Use TResult by default. You get TResultArray from:
useLoaderData()JSON.parse(response)For serialization: result.toArray() → send over network → use helpers directly on received arrays or deserialize using fromArray(result).
No conversion needed - helpers work with both!
FAQs
A minimal, functional, and tree-shakable Result library for TypeScript that prioritizes simplicity and serialization
The npm package tuple-result receives a total of 1,325 weekly downloads. As such, tuple-result popularity was classified as popular.
We found that tuple-result demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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