Maybe is a type that wraps optional values. It can either be a Just (has some value) or a Nothing
(has no value).
It's defined like this: type Maybe<A> = Just<A> | Nothing
In JavaScript, it is a better way of handling null and undefined. Instead of writing an if
statement, ternary expression, or && shorthand to check if a value is present you can just map
over it instead and assign the result of this expression or return it. You can also chain operations
together, often leading to much cleaner code.
It's inspired by Haskell's Maybe, Swift's Optional and Scala's Option.
Using yarn
$ yarn add maybes
or npm
$ npm install maybes
Import the library:
import { maybe } from 'maybes'or if you want everything:
import { maybe, just, nothing } from 'maybes'Use the maybe function to create a Maybe from a value.
const value = maybe(1) // Just(1)
value.isJust() // true
value.isNothing() // falseUse map to transform the value inside the Maybe.
value.map(v => v + 1) // Just(2)Force unwrap the value with just() if it is present. Warning: this will throw an Error if it
is a Nothing (has no value).
value.just() // 1 (or throws Error)Use the maybe function to wrap a possibly empty value.
const empty = maybe(null)
empty.isJust() // false
empty.isNothing() // true
empty.map(v => v + 1) // noop (No Operation)
empty.just() // throws errorUse orJust() to provide a default value.
empty.map(v => v.toUpperCase()).orJust('hello') // 'hello'Use orElse() to provide a default already wrapped in a Maybe. This can be useful if you want to combine
two or more Maybe's together.
const hello = maybe('hello')
empty.map(v => v.toUpperCase()).orElse(hello) // Maybe('hello')Chain operations together using map:
const m = maybe('Maybe ')
const result = m
.map(v => v.trim())
.map(v => v.toUpperCase()) // Just('MAYBE')Use flatMap if you need to return a Maybe in your closure instead of the value. For example,
when you want to explicitly return Nothing in a particular case.
const a = maybe('hi')
const result = a.flatMap(v => {
if (v === 'hi') {
return just('world')
} else {
return nothing
}
})just is a function like maybe that takes a value. nothing is a reference to Nothing.
Using filter is usually the best way to return a Nothing given a predicate. It returns
Just only if there is a value and applying the predicate function to the Maybe's value returns
true.
const name = maybe(' ')
const upper = name
.map(v => v.trim())
.filter(v => v.length != 0)
.map(v => v.toUpperCase())Use forEach when you would otherwise use map but can't or don't want to return a value. This
is usually when you are causing a side effect. forEach returns void and so enforces it's the
last in a chain. It runs only if there is a non empty value.
maybe('effect').forEach(s => console.log(s))This library uses Flowtype so you can also import the Maybe type and use
its definition:
import { maybe } from 'maybes'
import type { Maybe } from 'maybes'
function getSomething(): Maybe<string> {
return maybe('something')
}Don't worry if you don't use Flowtype though as it gets stripped by Babel.
Without Maybe
(value) ? transform(value) : null(Safe version in case value is falsy, e.g. 0)
(value != null) ? transform(value) : nullWith Maybe (handles falsy values like 0 and '' automatically).
maybe(value).map(transform)Without Maybe
const object: ?Object = {
value?: 'hello'
}
object && object.value && object.value.toUpperCase() || ''With Maybe
maybe(object).flatMap(o => maybe(o.value).map(v => v.toUpperCase())).orJust('')With types already converted to Maybe's.
const object = maybe({
value: maybe('hello')
})
object.flatMap(o => o.value.map(v => v.toUpperCase())).orJust('')Maybe is available under the MIT license. See LICENSE.