ts
The ts package makes it easy for users to write functions that can be used in rserve-ts applications.
Installation
You can install the development version of ts from GitHub with:
# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("tmelliott/ts")
Example
Writing functions is easy, just use the ts::x() functions to define
formals and return types.
Note: we recommend not importing the library, and instead using the
fully qualified name ts::x() to avoid conflicts with other libraries.
app <- ts::app(
add = ts::fun(
function(x = ts::number(), y = ts::number()) {
result <- x + y
ts::result(result, ts::number())
}
),
sample = ts::fun(
function(x = ts::character_vector(), n = ts::integer()) {
result <- sample(x, n)
ts::result(result,
ts::condition(n,
1 = ts::character(),
ts::character_vector()
)
)
}
)
)
ts::compile(app)
This will generate the following rserve-ts function definitions:
import { types as R } from "rserve-ts";
export const app = {
add: z.function(
z.tuple([z.number(), z.number()]),
z.promise(R.numeric(1))
),
sample: z.function(
z.tuple([z.character_vector(), z.integer()]),
z.promise(R.character())
)
};
which will generate the following types:
type App = {
add: (x: number, y: number) => Promise<{ data: number }>;
sample: (x: string[], n: number) => Promise<{ data: string | string[] }>;
// or, if possible, even better:
sample: <N extends number>(x: string[], n: N) =>
Promise<{ data: N extends 1 ? string : string[] }>;
};
Description
Languages
R
96.3%
TypeScript
2.6%
Makefile
1.1%