projecte_ionic/node_modules/type-fest/ts41/delimiter-case.d.ts
2022-02-09 18:30:03 +01:00

86 lines
2.8 KiB
TypeScript
Executable file

import {UpperCaseCharacters, WordSeparators} from '../source/utilities';
/**
Unlike a simpler split, this one includes the delimiter splitted on in the resulting array literal. This is to enable splitting on, for example, upper-case characters.
*/
export type SplitIncludingDelimiters<Source extends string, Delimiter extends string> =
Source extends '' ? [] :
Source extends `${infer FirstPart}${Delimiter}${infer SecondPart}` ?
(
Source extends `${FirstPart}${infer UsedDelimiter}${SecondPart}`
? UsedDelimiter extends Delimiter
? Source extends `${infer FirstPart}${UsedDelimiter}${infer SecondPart}`
? [...SplitIncludingDelimiters<FirstPart, Delimiter>, UsedDelimiter, ...SplitIncludingDelimiters<SecondPart, Delimiter>]
: never
: never
: never
) :
[Source];
/**
Format a specific part of the splitted string literal that `StringArrayToDelimiterCase<>` fuses together, ensuring desired casing.
@see StringArrayToDelimiterCase
*/
type StringPartToDelimiterCase<StringPart extends string, UsedWordSeparators extends string, UsedUpperCaseCharacters extends string, Delimiter extends string> =
StringPart extends UsedWordSeparators ? Delimiter :
StringPart extends UsedUpperCaseCharacters ? `${Delimiter}${Lowercase<StringPart>}` :
StringPart;
/**
Takes the result of a splitted string literal and recursively concatenates it together into the desired casing.
It receives `UsedWordSeparators` and `UsedUpperCaseCharacters` as input to ensure it's fully encapsulated.
@see SplitIncludingDelimiters
*/
type StringArrayToDelimiterCase<Parts extends any[], UsedWordSeparators extends string, UsedUpperCaseCharacters extends string, Delimiter extends string> =
Parts extends [`${infer FirstPart}`, ...infer RemainingParts]
? `${StringPartToDelimiterCase<FirstPart, UsedWordSeparators, UsedUpperCaseCharacters, Delimiter>}${StringArrayToDelimiterCase<RemainingParts, UsedWordSeparators, UsedUpperCaseCharacters, Delimiter>}`
: '';
/**
Convert a string literal to a custom string delimiter casing.
This can be useful when, for example, converting a camel-cased object property to an oddly cased one.
@see KebabCase
@see SnakeCase
@example
```
import {DelimiterCase} from 'type-fest';
// Simple
const someVariable: DelimiterCase<'fooBar', '#'> = 'foo#bar';
// Advanced
type OddlyCasedProps<T> = {
[K in keyof T as DelimiterCase<K, '#'>]: T[K]
};
interface SomeOptions {
dryRun: boolean;
includeFile: string;
foo: number;
}
const rawCliOptions: OddlyCasedProps<SomeOptions> = {
'dry#run': true,
'include#file': 'bar.js',
foo: 123
};
```
*/
export type DelimiterCase<Value, Delimiter extends string> = Value extends string
? StringArrayToDelimiterCase<
SplitIncludingDelimiters<Value, WordSeparators | UpperCaseCharacters>,
WordSeparators,
UpperCaseCharacters,
Delimiter
>
: Value;