160

I am having a function that accepts one string parameter. This parameter can have only one of a few defined possible values. What is the best way to document the same? Should shapeType be defined as enum or TypeDef or something else?

Shape.prototype.create = function (shapeType) {
    // shapeType can be "rect", "circle" or "ellipse"...
    this.type = shapeType;
};

Shape.prototype.getType = function (shapeType) {
    // shapeType can be "rect", "circle" or "ellipse"...
    return this.type;
};

The second part of the problem is that the possible values of shapeType is not known in the file that defines shapeType as whatever you suggest. There are multiple files contributed by several developers who might add to the possible values of shapeType.

PS: Am using jsdoc3

4
  • The multiple files problem makes this difficult. I usually see an enum for the definition and a union for the function parameter: ShapeType|string. However enums don't support adding subtypes after declaration in Closure-compiler. Sep 30, 2013 at 17:56
  • @ChadKillingsworth I see what you mean. I am stuck at a point where I want to define a set of properties (lets say an object that goes as construction parameter of a class). It is well and good had all properties of the construction was defined at one location. Unfortunately, my code has a number of modules contributing to that construction properties. Doing something like a mixin or subclassing the propertied would be going overboard! As such, if I can simply inject to a property list definition it would be great. Oct 1, 2013 at 9:58
  • Another similar issue that I am facing, but with distributed property listing is stackoverflow.com/questions/19113571/… Oct 1, 2013 at 10:15
  • All solutions below force us to create an Enum. There is an active feature request at GitHub to make this process much easier: github.com/jsdoc3/jsdoc/issues/629. So anybody who likes it should probably bump it.
    – Felix K.
    Jan 7, 2016 at 14:15

5 Answers 5

207

As of late 2014 in jsdoc3 you have the possibility to write:

/**
 * @param {('rect'|'circle'|'ellipse')} shapeType - The allowed type of the shape
 */
Shape.prototype.getType = function (shapeType) {
  return this.type;
};

Of course this will not be as reusable as a dedicated enum but in many cases a dummy enum is an overkill if it is only used by one function.

See also: https://github.com/jsdoc3/jsdoc/issues/629#issue-31314808

1
  • 5
    This is a better solution if you know that the param type will never change.
    – Luca Steeb
    Mar 29, 2016 at 17:56
76

What about:

/**
 * @typedef {"keyvalue" | "bar" | "timeseries" | "pie" | "table"} MetricFormat
 */

/**
 * @param format {MetricFormat}
 */
export function fetchMetric(format) {
    return fetch(`/matric}`, format);
}

enter image description here

1
  • Hey, is it possible to list the values from existing array? let say, I have array of string values, and I need to limit the input to the text that includes in this array
    – Kostanos
    Mar 9, 2023 at 16:11
35

How about declaring a dummy enum:

/**
 * Enum string values.
 * @enum {string}
 */
Enumeration = {
    ONE: "The number one",
    TWO: "A second number"
};

/**
 * Sample.
 * @param {Enumeration} a one of the enumeration values.
 */
Bar.prototype.sample = function(a) {};


b = new Bar();

bar.sample(Enumeration.ONE)

You need to at least declare the enum to JSDOC, for this, though. But the code is clean and you get auto-completion in WebStorm.

The multiple files problem though cannot be solved this way.

4
  • 1
    Yes. The enumeration approach is the only usable way I see. Anyways, I accept this as the only usable answer - since the multi-file problem is another story altogether! Oct 13, 2013 at 17:39
  • The problem with this approach is that it does not allow to document the individual values. I have an issue with JSDoc. github.com/jsdoc3/jsdoc/issues/1065
    – Gajus
    Sep 17, 2015 at 13:46
  • I don't see how this can be ok. Parameter "a" is expected to be an object with two properties, but you provide a string to the function. Aug 13, 2023 at 10:00
  • @LidelnKyoku - It works, because the type is declared to be an enum and then gets special treatment. Enumeration is not an object type but an enum type with string values. it does work
    – Sebastian
    Aug 25, 2023 at 8:06
12

I don't think there's a formal way of writing allowed values in JSDoc.

You certainly can write something like @param {String('up'|'down'|'left'|'right')} like user b12toaster mentioned.

enter image description here

But, by taking reference from APIDocjs, here's what I use for writing constrained values, aka allowedValues.

/**
 * Set the arrow position of the tooltip
 * @param {String='up','down','left','right'} position pointer position
 */
setPosition(position='left'){
  // YOUR OWN CODE
}

Oh yeah, I'm using ES6.

1
  • 3
    @param does not allow this type of syntax. The most standard way would be @param {"up"|"down"|"left"|"right"} [position=left] - pointer position.
    – RiZKiT
    Dec 17, 2021 at 9:33
1

This is how the Closure Compiler supports it: you can use "@enum" to define a restricted type. You don't actually have to define the values in enum definition. For instance, I might define an "integer" type like:

/** @enum {number} */
var Int = {};

/** @return {Int} */
function toInt(val) {
  return /** @type {Int} */ (val|0);
}

Int is generally assignable to "number" (it is a number) but "number" is not assignable to "Int" without some coercion (a cast).

4
  • But that doesn't restrict the possible values of Int. That's the part I'm not sure is possible. Oct 1, 2013 at 13:10
  • It does as much as any other type annotation or enum in JS. The restriction comes from how you write the code: every "cast" is a red flag. If you limit the casts to value factories then you get what you want: you can't assign 'number' to 'Int' without a warning.
    – John
    Oct 1, 2013 at 15:23
  • It still doesn't restrict the values of {Int}. :-( Oct 8, 2013 at 19:13
  • Sure it does, you restrict the value of Int by limiting how it is created and the restriction is done when the value is created. A raw number can not be assigned which is all you need.
    – John
    Oct 15, 2013 at 16:01

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