Package Exports
- type-detect
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 (type-detect) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
type-detect
Improved typeof detection for node and the browser.
What is Type-Detect?
Type Detect is a module which you can use to detect the type of a given object. It returns a string representation of the object's type, either using typeof or @@toStringTag. It also normalizes some object names for consistency among browsers.
Installation
Node.js
type-detect is available on npm. To install it, type:
$ npm install type-detectBrowsers
You can also use it within the browser; install via npm and use the type-detect.js file found within the download. For example:
<script src="./node_modules/type-detect/type-detect.js"></script>Usage
The primary export of type-detect is function that can serve as a replacement for typeof. The results of this function will be more specific than that of native typeof.
var type = require('type-detect');array
assert(type([]) === 'array');
assert(type(new Array()) === 'array');regexp
assert(type(/a-z/gi) === 'regexp');
assert(type(new RegExp('a-z')) === 'regexp');function
assert(type(function () {}) === 'function');arguments
(function () {
assert(type(arguments) === 'arguments');
})();date
assert(type(new Date) === 'date');number
assert(type(1) === 'number');
assert(type(1.234) === 'number');
assert(type(-1) === 'number');
assert(type(-1.234) === 'number');
assert(type(Infinity) === 'number');
assert(type(NaN) === 'number');
assert(type(new Number(1)) === 'number');string
assert(type('hello world') === 'string');
assert(type(new String('hello')) === 'string');null
assert(type(null) === 'null');
assert(type(undefined) !== 'null');undefined
assert(type(undefined) === 'undefined');
assert(type(null) !== 'undefined');object
var Noop = function () {};
assert(type({}) === 'object');
assert(type(Noop) !== 'object');
assert(type(new Noop) === 'object');
assert(type(new Object) === 'object');ECMA6 Types
All new ECMAScript 2015 objects are also supported, such as Promises and Symbols:
assert(type(new Map() === 'map');
assert(type(new WeakMap()) === 'weakmap');
assert(type(new Set()) === 'set');
assert(type(new WeakSet()) === 'weakset');
assert(type(Symbol()) === 'symbol');
assert(type(new Promise(callback) === 'promise');
assert(type(new Int8Array()) === 'int8array');
assert(type(new Uint8Array()) === 'uint8array');
assert(type(new UInt8ClampedArray()) === 'uint8clampedarray');
assert(type(new Int16Array()) === 'int16array');
assert(type(new Uint16Array()) === 'uint16array');
assert(type(new Int32Array()) === 'int32array');
assert(type(new UInt32Array()) === 'uint32array');
assert(type(new Float32Array()) === 'float32array');
assert(type(new Float64Array()) === 'float64array');
assert(type(new ArrayBuffer()) === 'arraybuffer');
assert(type(new DataView(arrayBuffer)) === 'dataview');Also, if you use Symbol.toStringTag to change an Objects return value of the toString() Method, type() will return this value, e.g:
var myObject = {};
myObject[Symbol.toStringTag] = 'myCustomType';
assert(type(myObject) === 'myCustomType');