predict-sugar
v0.1.5
Published
Syntactic sugar for if, else statements by a function. Aim for an implementation both clean and elegant.
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Predict Sugar
Syntactic sugar for if
, else
statements by a function. Aim for an implementation both clean and elegant.
"But it's worth to turn round the question: What is so special about if that it need a special syntax?" from wiki haskell.
Advantages
- Free of ambiguity and inconsistency
- Consistency with type inference
- Clean and elegant solution
- Support nested statements
Usage
To use predict, just drop a single line into your app:
import { predict } from 'predict-sugar'
See more real example.
Download the latest predict from GitHub, or install with npm:
npm install predict-sugar
Basic
Examples of basic statements
import { predict } from 'predict-sugar'
function testNum(a: number) {
let result
predict(a > 0).exec({
if() {
result = 'positive'
},
else() {
result = 'NOT positive'
}
})
return result
}
console.log(testNum(-5))
// expected output: "NOT positive"
Nested Statement
You can also use an statement in predict inside a statement. This is known as nested if else
statement.
import { predict, returnOf } from 'predict-sugar'
function isMaleGender(gender: string, age: number): string {
return returnOf(
predict(gender == 'male').exec<string>({
if(thenIf) {
return returnOf(
thenIf(age > 17).exec({
if() {
return 'Laki-laki 18+'
},
else() {
return 'Laki-laki'
}
})
)
},
else() {
return 'Wanita'
//
// return false -> If you pass this, will mismatched/ambiguous types,
// because this exec only return string. You don't need write type annotation
// `exec<string>`, predict has automatically infer your return type.
}
})
)!
}
console.log(isMaleGender('male', 18))
// expected output: "Laki-laki 18 +"
AND
operation
We can also write multiple conditions inside a single if statement with predictAnd
import { predictAnd } from 'predict-sugar'
const num = 10
// It's mean: num > 5 && num < 50
predictAnd([num > 5, num < 50]).exec({
if() {
return 'num is greater than 5 AND less than 50'
}
})
OR
operation
import { predictOr } from 'predict-sugar'
const num = 10
// It's mean: num > 5 || num < 10
predictOr([num > 5, num < 10]).exec({
if() {
return 'num is either less than 10 or greater than 5, or both'
}
})
License
This program is free software; it is distributed under an MIT License.