As TypeScript's type system becomes more complex, it's useful to be able to write tests for what a type should be.
This library offers reusable conditional types to help test your types.
These will resolve to the type true
when they match and false
otherwise.
IsNullable<T>
- Checks if T
is possibly null
or undefined
.IsExact<T, U>
- Checks if T
exactly matches U
.Has<T, U>
- Checks if T
has U
.NotHas<T, U>
- Checks if T
does not have U
.IsAny<T>
- Checks if T
is the any
type.IsNever<T>
- Checks if T
is the never
type.IsUnknown<T>
- Checks if T
is the unknown
type.Use what you prefer:
AssertTrue
, AssertFalse
, or Assert
types.assert
function.AssertTrue
, AssertFalse
, and Assert
Doing a test:
import type {
AssertFalse,
AssertTrue,
Has,
IsNever,
IsNullable,
} from "https://deno.land/x/conditional_type_checks/mod.ts";
const result = someFunction(someArg);
type _test =
| AssertTrue<Has<typeof result, string> | IsNullable<typeof result>>
| AssertFalse<IsNever<typeof result>>
| Assert<Has<typeof result, number>, true>;
Warning: Do not use an intersection type between checks (ex. Has<string | number, string> & IsNever<never>
) because it will cause everything to pass if only one of the checks passes.
assert
Doing a test:
import {
assert,
IsExact,
} from "https://deno.land/x/conditional_type_checks/mod.ts";
const result = someFunction(someArg);
// compile error if the type of `result` is not exactly `string | number`
assert<IsExact<typeof result, string | number>>(true);
Failure:
// causes a compile error that `true` is not assignable to `false`
assert<IsNullable<string>>(true); // string is not nullable
npm install --save-dev conditional-type-checks