I receive a number type = 3
and have to check if it exists in this enum:
export const MESSAGE_TYPE = {
INFO: 1,
SUCCESS: 2,
WARNING: 3,
ERROR: 4,
};
The best way I found is by getting all Enum Values as an array and using indexOf on it. But the resulting code isn't very legible:
if( -1 < _.values( MESSAGE_TYPE ).indexOf( _.toInteger( type ) ) ) {
// do stuff ...
}
Is there a simpler way of doing this?
if(Object.values(MESSAGE_TYPE).includes(+type)
? There's not much you can do.
!!MESSAGE_TYPE[type]
to check if a value exists. MESSAGE_TYPE[type]
will return undefined if the value of type
doesn't exist on MESSAGE_TYPE
0
, though.
MESSAGE_TYPE[type] !== undefined
If you want this to work with string enums, you need to use Object.values(ENUM).includes(ENUM.value)
because string enums are not reverse mapped, according to https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/release-notes/typescript-2-4.html:
enum Vehicle {
Car = 'car',
Bike = 'bike',
Truck = 'truck'
}
becomes:
{
Car: 'car',
Bike: 'bike',
Truck: 'truck'
}
So you just need to do:
if (Object.values(Vehicle).includes('car')) {
// Do stuff here
}
If you get an error for: Property 'values' does not exist on type 'ObjectConstructor'
, then you are not targeting ES2017. You can either use this tsconfig.json config:
"compilerOptions": {
"lib": ["es2017"]
}
Or you can just do an any cast:
if ((<any>Object).values(Vehicle).includes('car')) {
// Do stuff here
}
This works only on non-const, number-based enums. For const enums or enums of other types, see this answer above
If you are using TypeScript, you can use an actual enum. Then you can check it using in
.
export enum MESSAGE_TYPE {
INFO = 1,
SUCCESS = 2,
WARNING = 3,
ERROR = 4,
};
var type = 3;
if (type in MESSAGE_TYPE) {
}
This works because when you compile the above enum, it generates the below object:
{
'1': 'INFO',
'2': 'SUCCESS',
'3': 'WARNING',
'4': 'ERROR',
INFO: 1,
SUCCESS: 2,
WARNING: 3,
ERROR: 4
}
export const MESSAGE_TYPE = { ... }
According to sandersn the best way to do this would be:
Object.values(MESSAGE_TYPE).includes(type as MESSAGE_TYPE)
any
. The type in MESSAGE_TYPE
syntax might be better if you can guarantee that the key and the value of the enum will be the same since it's a key lookup rather than a value lookup.
any
or type complains, AND it works when the enum names themselves do not match their respective actual values (as many hacky solutions on this page suggest or use). Should be the accepted answer, especially coming originally from TypeScript's GitHub.
if
presented in the question with it. Do you have trouble using it?
export enum YourEnum {
enum1 = 'enum1',
enum2 = 'enum2',
enum3 = 'enum3',
}
const status = 'enumnumnum';
if (!Object.values(YourEnum)?.includes(status)) {
throw new UnprocessableEntityResponse('Invalid enum val');
}
in
keyword matches keys, not values, so you need a better solution for the if statement, such as Object.values(YourEnum).includes(status)
or an indexOf solution for ES5.
There is a very simple and easy solution to your question:
var districtId = 210;
if (DistrictsEnum[districtId] != null) {
// Returns 'undefined' if the districtId not exists in the DistrictsEnum
model.handlingDistrictId = districtId;
}
Type assertion is un-avoidable. Following up on
enum Vehicle {
Car = 'car',
Bike = 'bike',
Truck = 'truck'
}
I found one alternative that wasn't mentioned so thought I'd share my fix for it:
const someString: Vehicle | string = 'car';
const inEnum = (Object.values(Vehicle) as string[]).includes(someString);
I find this more truthful because we usually come in typesafe(with a string) and want to compare it to the enum; it'd be a bit reckless to typecast it to any
(reason: never do this) or Vehicle
(reason: likely untruthful). Instead, typecasting the Object.values()
output to an array of strings is in-fact very much real.
export enum UserLevel {
Staff = 0,
Leader,
Manager,
}
export enum Gender {
None = "none",
Male = "male",
Female = "female",
}
Difference result in log:
log(Object.keys(Gender))
=>
[ 'None', 'Male', 'Female' ]
log(Object.keys(UserLevel))
=>
[ '0', '1', '2', 'Staff', 'Leader', 'Manager' ]
The solution, we need to remove key as a number.
export class Util {
static existValueInEnum(type: any, value: any): boolean {
return Object.keys(type).filter(k => isNaN(Number(k))).filter(k => type[k] === value).length > 0;
}
}
Usage
// For string value
if (!Util.existValueInEnum(Gender, "XYZ")) {
//todo
}
//For number value, remember cast to Number using Number(val)
if (!Util.existValueInEnum(UserLevel, 0)) {
//todo
}
For anyone who comes here looking to validate if a string is one of the values of an enum and type convert it, I wrote this function that returns the proper type and returns undefined
if the string is not in the enum.
function keepIfInEnum<T>(
value: string,
enumObject: { [key: string]: T }
) {
if (Object.values(enumObject).includes((value as unknown) as T)) {
return (value as unknown) as T;
} else {
return undefined;
}
}
As an example:
enum StringEnum {
value1 = 'FirstValue',
value2 = 'SecondValue',
}
keepIfInEnum<StringEnum>('FirstValue', StringEnum) // 'FirstValue'
keepIfInEnum<StringEnum>('OtherValue', StringEnum) // undefined
Update:
I've found that whenever I need to check if a value exists in an enum, I don't really need an enum and that a type is a better solution. So my enum in my original answer becomes:
export type ValidColors =
| "red"
| "orange"
| "yellow"
| "green"
| "blue"
| "purple";
Original answer:
For clarity, I like to break the values
and includes
calls onto separate lines. Here's an example:
export enum ValidColors {
Red = "red",
Orange = "orange",
Yellow = "yellow",
Green = "green",
Blue = "blue",
Purple = "purple",
}
function isValidColor(color: string): boolean {
const options: string[] = Object.values(ValidColors);
return options.includes(color);
}
type ValidColors
is that you can't write an isValidColor(color: string): boolean
function for it: since type ValidColors
doesn't exist at runtime, there is nothing to check against. This is a problem if you're trying to go from an un-typed API (e.g. user input) to a ValidColor
and reject invalid inputs.
The following function returns another function which acts as a type predicate for the input enum (assuming it is a string style enum).
function constructEnumPredicate<RuntimeT extends string, EnumClass extends {[key: string]: RuntimeT}>(enumClass: EnumClass): (maybeEnum: string) => maybeEnum is EnumClass[keyof EnumClass] {
const reverseMapping: {[key: string]: boolean} = {};
for (const enumVal in enumClass) {
const enumStr = enumClass[enumVal];
reverseMapping[enumStr] = true;
}
function result(maybeEnum: any): maybeEnum is EnumClass[keyof EnumClass] {
return !!reverseMapping[maybeEnum];
}
return result;
}
It works in TypeScript 4.2.4, but I have not tested earlier versions.
The main interesting part is the EnumClass[keyof EnumClass]
return type. When such a type is an enum in TypeScript, it returns the original type of the enum where EnumClass is the type of the runtime enum class.
For an example of how to use this construction, suppose we have the following enum:
enum Direction {
Left = "<-",
Right = "->"
}
Direction
is both a type as well as a runtime object. We can generate a type predicate for Direction and use it like so:
const isDirection = constructEnumPredicate(Direction);
function coerceDirection(maybeDir: string): Direction {
// Since we make a type predicate rather than just a normal predicate,
// no explicit type casting is necessary!
return isDirection(maybeDir) ? maybeDir : Direction.Left;
}
reverseMapping
?
If you there to find how to check union contain specific value, there is solution:
// source enum type
export const EMessagaType = {
Info,
Success,
Warning,
Error,
};
//check helper
const isUnionHasValue = <T extends number>(union: T, value: T) =>
(union & value) === value;
//tests
console.log(
isUnionHasValue(EMessagaType.Info | EMessagaType.Success),
EMessagaType.Success);
//output: true
console.log(
isUnionHasValue(EMessagaType.Info | EMessagaType.Success),
EMessagaType.Error);
//output: false
enum ServicePlatform {
UPLAY = "uplay",
PSN = "psn",
XBL = "xbl"
}
becomes:
{ UPLAY: 'uplay', PSN: 'psn', XBL: 'xbl' }
so
ServicePlatform.UPLAY in ServicePlatform // false
SOLUTION:
ServicePlatform.UPLAY.toUpperCase() in ServicePlatform // true
Success story sharing
Property 'values' does not exist on type 'ObjectConstructor'
.(<any>Object).values(Vehicle).includes(Vehicle.car)
(Object.values(Vehicle).includes(Vehicle.car))
will always be true, but the question is how check that a given value is included in enum, for example(Object.values(Vehicle).includes('car'))
should returntrue
but(Object.values(Vehicle).includes('plane'))
should return false.Object.values(Vehicle).includes('car')
however warnsArgument of type 'string' is not assignable to parameter of type 'Vehicle'
so you also have to type assertObject.values<string>(Enum).includes(value)
works for me