wenn
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0.2.0 • Public • Published

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wenn.js

A simple but powerful utility function, inspired by Kotlin's when.

Installation

npm install wenn.js --save

Basic Usage

const value = "Foo";  
 
const result = wenn(value,  
  Case("Foo").Then(0),  
  Case("Bar").Then(1)
);  
 
// result == 0
const value = "Foo";  
 
wenn(value,  
  Case("Foo").Then(() => console.log("Value is 'Foo'")),  
  Case("Bar").Then(() => console.log("Value is 'Bar'"))
);  
const value = "Test";  
 
const result = wenn(value,  
  Case("Foo").Then(0),  
  Case("Bar").Then(1),  
  Else(-1)
);  
 
// result == -1

If an Else case would be required but not found, there will be an error. You can always add Else(undefined).

const value = "Test";  
 
const result = wenn(value,  
  Case("Foo").Then(0),  
  Case("Bar").Then(1)
);  
 
// ERROR: No case matched, but also no ELSE case given. You can add Else(undefined) to your cases to prevent an error.

Usage in TypeScript

Infer the types to prevent errors while compiling.

const value: string = "Test";
 
const result: string = wenn(value,
  Case("Foo").Then("A"),
  Case("Bar").Then("B"),
  Else("?"));

wennChain usage

wennChain allows you to propagate a value through all cases, until it doesn't match anymore or there's a Break().

const value = 4;
 
const result = wennChain(value,
    Case(isNegative).Then(0),
    Break(),
    Case(isPositive).Then(x => x + 1),
    Case(always).Then(x => x * 4),
    Break(),
    Case(always).Then(x => x * 3)
);
 
// result === 20

wennElvis usage

wennElvis builds on top of wennChain. It's basically chained isntUndefined cases, with your given thens. It allows a string with dot notation or even function calls, to access nested properties. If a property wasn't found or a function call returns undefined, the function will safely return undefined.

const value = {
    data: {
        persons: [
            {
                name: "A",
                age: 18
            },
            {
                name: "B",
                age: 21
            },
            {
                name: "C",
                age: 46
            }
        ]
    }
};
 
const result = wennElvis(value,
    "data.persons",
    arr => arr.find(v => v.age > 100),
    "name"
);
 
// result === undefined, and no error

You can look at some examples in the test cases.

Comparison with Kotlin's when

Simple number switch else case

Kotlin's when

when (x) {  
    1 -> print("x == 1")  
    2 -> print("x == 2") 
    else -> {  // Note the block  
        print("x is neither 1 nor 2")  
    }  
}

wenn.js

wenn(x,  
  Case(1).Then(() => console.log("x == 1")),  
  Case(2).Then(() => console.log("x == 2")),  
  Else(() => console.log("x is neither 1 nor 2"))  
);

Multi cases

Kotlin's when

when (x) {
    0, 1 -> print("x == 0 or x == 1")
    else -> print("otherwise")
}

wenn.js

wenn(x,  
  Case(0, 1).Then(() => console.log("x == 0 or x == 1")),  
  Else(() => console.log("otherwise"))  
);

Arbitrary expressions

Kotlin's when

when (x) {
    parseInt(s) -> print("s encodes x")
    else -> print("s does not encode x")
}

wenn.js

wenn(x,  
  Case(isNumeric(s)).Then(() => console.log("s encodes x")),  
  Else(() => console.log("s does not encode x"))  
);

Negate, range, in array

Kotlin's when

when (x) {
    in 1..10 -> print("x is in the range")
    in validNumbers -> print("x is valid")
    !in 10..20 -> print("x is outside the range")
    else -> print("none of the above")
}

wenn.js

wenn(x,  
  Case(inRange(1, 10)).Then(() => console.log("x is in the range")),
  Case(inArray(validNumbers)).Then(() => console.log("x is valid")),
  Case(not(inRange(10, 20))).Then(() => console.log("x is outside the range")),  
  Else(() => console.log("none of the above"))  
);

Functions of objects as cases

Kotlin's when

when {
    x.isOdd() -> print("x is odd")
    x.isEven() -> print("x is even")
    else -> print("x is funny")
}

wenn.js

wenn(true,
    Case(x.isOdd()).Then("x is odd"),
    Case(x.isEven()).Then("x is even"),
    Else("x is funny")
);

Test

npm run test

Special Thanks

Special thanks to @MakroCow for helping out on the syntax and beta testing.

License

MIT

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