Say I have the following constant string:
export default const FOO = 'FOO'
Say I import this in a flow annotated file like so:
import FOO from '../consts/Foo'
I then have a function:
const example = (foo : string) : {| type: FOO, foo: string |} => {
return {type: FOO, foo: foo}
}
This doesn't typecheck with:
6: const example = (foo : string) : {| type: FOO, foo: string |}=> {
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ string. Ineligible value used in/as type annotation (did you forget 'typeof'?)
6: const example = (foo : string) : {| type: FOO, foo: string |}=> {
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ FOO
So my questions are:
1) is it possible to use constants in flow types, how can I reproduce this behaviour?
2) Is it possible to do dependent types in flow? so for example, could I encode, through types, that the string that is returned must be the same string that is passed into the example
function?
EDIT: Clarification to part 2: Is it possible to in some way indicate that the foo
parameter passed into the example
function is in fact the same string as the string at the foo
key in the return object? Or to assert that the input and output have the same length (for say a shift cipher function). Or say contain a permutation of the same characters? (for a shuffle).
FOO
to have type'FOO'
then you'll need to declare it, otherwise it's just a string. For the objects, you'd then dotype: typeof FOO
like the error says. I'm not quite sure what you're asking in your 2) point though. Then you'd end up with an object with two properties with the same string value.