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Variant Match

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Brings variant match pattern to TypeScript.

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What are Variants?

Variants are a simple yet powerful way to represent a set of various states that can contain deferring data. Variants help you write code in a way where invalid states are not representable. Variant types extend the VariantTypeClass that provides a match method used to operate on the different variants in the type class.

The match method takes in named branches. Executing the match method will execute the named branch that match the variant's kind. If a variant contains data that data is passed into the named branch that matches the variant's kind. The match method returns the value returned by the named branch that was executed.

Getting Started

$ npm install variant-match

Example:

import { Variant, variant, VariantTypeClass } from "variant-match";

type ABCVariant =
  | Variant<"A", [a: string]>
  | Variant<"B", [b: number, bool: boolean]>
  | Variant<"C">;

class ABC extends VariantTypeClass<ABCVariant> {
  // add any useful methods for ABC variants
}

const A = (a: string) => new ABC(variant("A", a));
const B = (b: number, bool: boolean) => new ABC(variant("B", b, bool));
const C = new ABC(variant("C"));

export { A, B, C };

const handleABC = (abc: ABC) =>
  abc.match({
    A(a) {
      return `A: ${a}`;
    },
    B(b, bool) {
      return `B: ${b} | ${bool}`;
    },
    C() {
      return "C";
    },
  });

handleABC(A("string")); // 'A: string'
handleABC(B(123, true)); // 'B: 123 | true'
handleABC(C); // 'C'

const handleA = (abc: ABC) =>
  abc.match({
    A(a) {
      return `A: ${a}`;
    },

    // catch all
    _() {
      return "B or C";
    },
  });

handleA(A("string")); // 'A: string'
handleA(B(123, true)); // 'B or C'
handleA(C); // 'B or C'

Included Variant Type Classes

Included with this library are two variant type classes: Optional and Result.

Optional

This variant class has two variants: Some<T> and None. The Some<T> represents that there is some value of type T. The None represents that there is no value at all.

Example:

import { None, Some, Optional } from "variant-match";

const parseInteger = (value: string): Optional<number> => {
  const integer = parseInt(value, 10);

  if (!Number.isInteger(integer)) {
    return None;
  }

  return Some(integer);
};

const doubleStringNumberOrZero = (value: string) => 
  parseInteger(value)
    .map((n) => n * 2)
    .fallback(() => 0);

doubleStringNumberOrZero('2'); // 4
doubleStringNumberOrZero('string'); // 0

Result

This variant class has two variants: Ok<T> and Err<E>. The Ok<T> represents that there is an ok value of type T. The Err<E> represents that there is an error of type E.

Example:

import { Err, Ok, Result } from "variant-match";

const parseInteger2 = (value: string): Result<number, TypeError> => {
  const integer = parseInt(value, 10);

  if (!Number.isInteger(integer)) {
    return Err(new TypeError('Could not parse value into integer.'));
  }

  return Ok(integer);
};

const doubleStringNumberOrZero2 = (value: string) =>
  parseInteger2(value)
    .map((n) => n * 2)
    .fallback(() => 0);

doubleStringNumberOrZero2("2"); // 4
doubleStringNumberOrZero2("string"); // 0

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Brings variant match pattern to TypeScript.

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