Open
Description
Search Terms
- type predicate
- reference binding pattern
- type predicate cannot reference
- destructured
Suggestion
The possibility to use destructured parameters in type predicates.
Use Cases
Destructuring is heavily used in functional/reactive programming, notably with rxjs where various contextual properties tend to be passed between each operator.
Having the ability to succinctly test for types would make the code more readable, e.g.:
type Example = {
a: number;
b: string | undefined;
};
const example: Example = {
a: 42,
b: 'hello';
};
of(example).pipe(
guard(({ b }): b is string => b !== undefined, 'b cannot be undefined'),
tap({ b }) => { /* b is now a string rather than a string | undefined })
);
Right now the alternative is
of(example).pipe(
guard((x): x is Omit<typeof x, 'b'> & { b: string } => x.b !== undefined, 'b cannot be undefined'),
tap({ b }) => { /* b is now a string rather than a string | undefined })
);
Or, without a predicate
of(example).pipe(
map(x => {
if (x.b === undefined) {
throw new Error();
}
return x;
}),
tap({ b }) => { /* b is now a string rather than a string | undefined })
);
Examples
function assertSomething(
{ property }: T
): property is AssertionHere {
return true;
}
This would roughly translate to something like:
function assertSomething(
obj: T
): obj is Omit<T, 'property'> & { property: AssertionHere } {
return true;
}
Checklist
My suggestion meets these guidelines:
- This wouldn't be a breaking change in existing TypeScript/JavaScript code
- This wouldn't change the runtime behavior of existing JavaScript code
- This could be implemented without emitting different JS based on the types of the expressions
- This isn't a runtime feature (e.g. library functionality, non-ECMAScript syntax with JavaScript output, etc.)
- This feature would agree with the rest of TypeScript's Design Goals.