unnullish
unnullish
provided by this package returns the value as is if value
is
nullish, otherwise it executes callback
and returns the result. It is an
opposite function of the
nullish coalescing operator
(??
).
Usage
unnullish
unnullish<T, R>(value: T | null | undefined, callback(v: T) => R): R | null | undefined
The function is useful when you want to apply some transformation functions to optional values. For example,
import { unnullish } from "https://deno.land/x/unnullish/mod.ts";
type Options = {
foo?: string;
bar?: boolean;
};
const options: Options = {
foo: unnullish(Deno.env.get("foo"), (v) => v.toUpperCase()),
// instead of
//foo: Deno.env.get("foo") != null
// ? Deno.env.get("foo").toUpperCase()
// : undefined,
bar: unnullish(Deno.env.get("bar"), (v) => parseInt(v, 10)),
// instead of
//bar: Deno.env.get("bar") != null
// ? parseInt(Deno.env.get("bar"), 10)
// : undefined,
};
Note that the function returns null
or undefined
as is, mean that you
may need to use nullish coalescing operator to normalize the result. For
example,
import { unnullish } from "https://deno.land/x/unnullish/mod.ts";
console.log(unnullish(null, () => 0));
// -> null
console.log(unnullish(undefined, () => 0));
// -> undefined
console.log(unnullish(null, () => 0) ?? undefined);
// -> undefined
console.log(unnullish(undefined, () => 0) ?? undefined);
// -> undefined
License
The code follows MIT license written in LICENSE. Contributors need to agree that any modifications sent in this repository follow the license.