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prop-types-ts

v0.7.4

Published

Alternative syntax for prop types providing both static and runtime type safety, powered by io-ts

Downloads

55

Readme

Alternative syntax for prop types powered by io-ts

How it works

The @props decorator sets propTypes on the target component to use a custom validator function built around io-ts types.

Usage

import * as React from 'react'
import * as t from 'io-ts'
import { props } from 'prop-types-ts'

// define the runtime types

const AlertType = t.keyof(
  {
    success: true,
    warning: true,
    info: true
  },
  'AlertType'
)

const RuntimeProps = t.interface(
  {
    type: AlertType
  },
  'Props'
)

// extract the static type

export type Props = t.TypeOf<typeof RuntimeProps>
// same as type Props = { type: 'success' | 'warning' | 'info' }

@props(RuntimeProps)
export default class Alert extends React.Component<Props, void> {
  render() {
    return <div>{this.props.children}</div>
  }
}

Without decorators

import { getPropTypes } from 'prop-types-ts'

...

export default class Alert extends React.Component<Props, void> {
  static propTypes = getPropTypes(RuntimeProps)
  render() {
    return <div>{this.props.children}</div>
  }
}

Errors on console

<Alert type="foo" /> // => Invalid value "foo" supplied to : Props/type: AlertType
<Alert type="info" foo="bar" /> // => Invalid additional prop(s): ["foo"]

Excess Property Checks

By default prop-types-ts performs excess property checks. You can opt-out passing an option argument to props

@props(RuntimeProps, { strict: false })
export default class Alert extends React.Component<Props, void> {
  ...
}

Pre-defined types

prop-types-ts exports some useful pre-defined types:

  • ReactElement
  • ReactChild
  • ReactFragment
  • ReactNode

Type checking children

Use the children option

@props(RuntimeProps, { children: t.string })
export default class Alert extends React.Component<Props, void> {
  ...
}

<Alert type="info">{1}</Alert> // => Invalid value 1 supplied to children: string
<Alert type="info">hello</Alert> // no errors

You can use any io-ts type

import { props, ReactChild } from 'prop-types-ts'

@props(RuntimeProps, { children: t.tuple([t.string, ReactChild]) })
export default class Alert extends React.Component<Props, void> {
  ...
}

<Alert type="info">hello</Alert> // => Invalid value "hello" supplied to children: [string, ReactChild]
<Alert type="info">hello <b>world</b></Alert> // no errors

works for Components too

import * as t from 'io-ts'
import { props, ReactElement } from 'prop-types-ts'

const JSXButton = t.refinement(ReactElement, e => e.type === 'button', 'JSXButton')

@props(RuntimeProps, { children: JSXButton })
export default class Alert extends React.Component<Props, void> {
  ...
}

<Alert type="info">hello</Alert> // => Invalid value "hello" supplied to children: JSXButton
<Alert type="info"><button>Click me</button></Alert> // no errors

TypeScript compatibility

| prop-type-ts version | required typescript version | | ---------------------- | ----------------------------- | | 0.7.x+ | 3.5+ | | 0.6.x+ | 3.2+ |