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  • License MIT

Enhances a JavaScript class by adding an is<Class> property to compare types between realms.

Package Exports

  • class-is

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (class-is) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

class-is

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Enhances a JavaScript class by adding an is<Class> property to compare types between realms.

Motivation

Checking if a value is an instance of a class in JavaScript is not an easy task.

You can use instanceof, but that doesn't work between different realms or different versions. Comparing with constructor.name could be a solution but if you need to Uglify the module it doesn't work, as it creates different names for the same module.

Symbols to the rescue!

Installation

$ npm install class-is

If you want to use this module in the browser you have to compile it yourself to your desired target.

Usage

ES6 classes:

// Package X
const withIs = require('class-is');

class Person {
    constructor(name, city) {
        this.name = name;
        this.city = city;
    }
}

module.exports = withIs(Person, {
    className: 'Person',
    symbolName: '@org/package-x/Person',
});
// Package Y
const withIs = require('class-is');

class Animal {
    constructor(species) {
        this.species = species;
    }
}

module.exports = withIs(Animal, {
    className: 'Animal',
    symbolName: '@org/package-y/Animal',
});
const Person = require('package-x');
const Animal = require('package-y');

const diogo = new Person('Diogo', 'Porto');
const wolf = new Animal('Gray Wolf');

console.log(Person.isPerson(diogo));
console.log(Person.isPerson(wolf));

Running the example above will print:

true
false

ES5 and below classes:

In ES5 it's not unusual to see constructors like the one below, so you can call it without using the new keyword.

function Circle(radius) {
    if (!(this instanceof Circle)) {
        return new Circle();
    }

    this.radius = radius;
}

In such cases you can use the withIs.proto method:

const withIs = require('class-is');

const Circle = withIs.proto(function (radius) {
    if (!(this instanceof Circle)) {
        return new Circle();
    }

    this.radius = radius;
}, {
    className: 'Circle',
    symbolName: '@org/package/Circle',
});

...or even better:

const withIs = require('class-is');

function Circle(radius) {
    this.radius = radius;
}

module.exports = withIs.proto(Circle, {
    className: 'Circle',
    symbolName: '@org/package/Circle',
    withoutNew: true,
});

API

withIs(Class, { className, symbolName })

class

Type: class

The class to be enhanced.

className

Type: String

The name of the class your passing.

symbolName

Type: String

Unique id for the class. This should be namespaced so different classes from different modules do not collide and give false positives.

Example: @organization/package/Class

withIs.proto(Class, { className, symbolName, withoutNew })

The className and symbolName parameters are the same as above.

withoutNew

Type: Boolean
Default: false

Allow creating an instance without the new operator.

Tests

$ npm test
$ npm test -- --watch during development

License

MIT