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Readonly fields on inferred type #9
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That's a good idea 👍 I wonder what the API should be, as there are two cases that could be supported:
|
Yeah, having a way to make the entire object readonly would be useful too, and would save some repetitive typing. I'm not sufficiently familiar with the implementation to be able to suggest a good API. For specific properties, using |
for read only arrays/tuples and objects/records having a |
After thinking about this for a while... I haven't reached any good conclusion. But I have some thoughts, so prepare for a half-formed braindump 🙂 What is .readonly()?I'm a bit worried about the fact that "readonly" tends to refer to two slightly different things in TypeScript. Having a
Therefore v.object({
a: v.array(v.number()).readonly()
}); Is the output type now One solution for this would, of course, to have different named methods for those different use cases. Like Helper functionsI'm not fully convinced this even needs to be in the Valita core. // Flatten an intersection { a: A } & { b: B } to { a: A, b: B }
type Flatten<V> = { [K in keyof V]: V[K] };
// Create a type predicate that asserts that the objects given fields are readonly.
function ro<O extends Record<string, unknown>, F extends (keyof O)[]>(
..._fields: F
) {
return (
o: O
): o is Flatten<Omit<O, F[number]> & Readonly<Pick<O, F[number]>>> => true;
}
const SCHEMA = v
.object({
regular_field: v.string(),
optional_field: v.string().optional(),
readonly_field: v.string(),
})
.assert(ro("readonly_field"));
type InferredType = v.Infer<typeof SCHEMA>;
// type InferredType = {
// regular_field: string;
// optional_field?: string | undefined;
// readonly readonly_field: string;
// } A similar solution can be cooked up for making the whole object / array readonly. Let's get radicalOne interesting & bit radical approach would be to just make all Valita output readonly by default. It would have the additional benefit of discouraging people to mutate the output (and therefore accidentally mutating the input too, as Valita passes through the original object if it can get away with it). YMMV, of course 🙂 |
I see your point about the ambiguity. Using both By the way, doesn't v.object({
a: v.array(v.number()).optional()
}); ...will this result in Or even simpler: Does this v.object({
a: v.number().optional()
}); ...result in The helper function isn't bad, but the ergonomics from a user point of view aren't great: Why do I mark optional fields as optional in the definition itself, while I have to use separate assertions to make a field readonly, even though optional and readonly are both core features of TypeScript? Regarding readonly fields by default: I wouldn't be opposed, but then you'll need a way to mark some fields as mutable, which results in the same discussion 🙂 It's probably something that could be discussed separately. |
No, it's not the same. In TypeScript the optional modifier acts very different compared to However, the interface Foo {
readonly bar: string[]
}
// vs
interface Foo {
bar: readonly string[]
} That's where the ambiguity comes from. |
@jviide wrote:
I totally support this! We don't use |
The other thing you can do is manipulate the inferred type const A = v.object({
a: v.string(),
b: v.string(),
});
type ARO = Readonly<v.Infer<typeof A>> // entirely read only
type BRO = ReadonlyProp<'b', v.Infer<typeof A>> // just set prop 'b' to be readonly
// even weirder?
const ARO = A as v.Type<Readonly<v.Infer<typeof A>>> |
i like it too, but it really not for every env. For example, vuejs prefers mutability, react immutability, angular mutability(especially with signals), on backend i we can extend initial data (its rare case, but...). So I think, mutable is better due to js nature. If we really need readonly result we can make a helper or add an option to parse/try methods. Also, if we care about perfomance, mutable is always better. |
This is the recommended method, and you can encapsulate it into a helper tailored for your use case. A couple of examples: // Type-level version
function readonly<T extends unknown[] | Record<string, unknown>>(
v: T,
): Readonly<T> {
return v as Readonly<T>;
}
v.object({ a: v.number() }).map(readonly);
v.array(v.number()).map(readonly);
v.tuple([v.number()]).map(readonly);
v.record(v.number()).map(readonly);
// Coerce values to frozen objects / arrays
function frozen<T extends unknown[] | Record<string, unknown>>(
v: T,
): Readonly<T> {
if (Array.isArray(v)) {
return Object.freeze([...v]) as unknown as Readonly<T>;
}
return Object.freeze({ ...v });
}
v.object({ a: v.number() }).map(frozen);
v.array(v.number()).map(frozen);
v.tuple([v.number()]).map(frozen);
v.record(v.number()).map(frozen); |
Is there a way to get fields in the inferred type to be marked as readonly?
I'm thinking of something like this:
..resulting in:
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