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Laca-City/frontend/node_modules/ts-interface-checker
PhongPham c65cc97a33 🎯 MapView v2.0 - Global Deployment Ready
 MAJOR FEATURES:
• Auto-zoom intelligence với smart bounds fitting
• Enhanced 3D GPS markers với pulsing effects
• Professional route display với 6-layer rendering
• Status-based parking icons với availability indicators
• Production-ready build optimizations

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• Smart bounds fitting cho GPS + selected parking
• Adaptive padding (50px) cho visual balance
• Max zoom control (level 16) để tránh quá gần
• Dynamic centering khi không có selection

🎨 ENHANCED VISUALS:
• 3D GPS marker với multi-layer pulse effects
• Advanced parking icons với status colors
• Selection highlighting với animation
• Dimming system cho non-selected items

🛣️ ROUTE SYSTEM:
• OpenRouteService API integration
• Multi-layer route rendering (glow, shadow, main, animated)
• Real-time distance & duration calculation
• Visual route info trong popup

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• SSR safe với dynamic imports
• Build errors resolved
• Global deployment via Vercel
• Optimized performance

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• Bundle size: 22.8 kB optimized
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💾 VERSION CONTROL:
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2025-07-20 19:52:16 +07:00

ts-interface-checker

Build Status npm version

Runtime library to validate data against TypeScript interfaces.

This package is the runtime support for validators created by ts-interface-builder. It allows validating data, such as parsed JSON objects received over the network, or parsed JSON or YAML files, to check if they satisfy a TypeScript interface, and to produce informative error messages if they do not.

Installation

npm install --save-dev ts-interface-builder
npm install --save ts-interface-checker

Usage

Suppose you have a TypeScript file defining an interface:

// foo.ts
interface Square {
  size: number;
  color?: string;
}

The first step is to generate some code for runtime checks:

`npm bin`/ts-interface-builder foo.ts

It produces a file like this:

// foo-ti.js
import * as t from "ts-interface-checker";

export const Square = t.iface([], {
  "size": "number",
  "color": t.opt("string"),
});
...

Now at runtime, to check if a value satisfies the Square interface:

import fooTI from "./foo-ti";
import {createCheckers} from "ts-interface-checker";

const {Square} = createCheckers(fooTI);

Square.check({size: 1});                  // OK
Square.check({size: 1, color: "green"});  // OK
Square.check({color: "green"});           // Fails with "value.size is missing"
Square.check({size: 4, color: 5});        // Fails with "value.color is not a string"

Note that ts-interface-builder is only needed for the build-time step, and ts-interface-checker is needed at runtime. That's why the recommendation is to npm-install the former using --save-dev flag and the latter using --save.

Checking method calls

If you have an interface with methods, you can validate method call arguments and return values:

// greet.ts
interface Greeter {
  greet(name: string): string;
}

After generating the runtime code, you can now check calls like:

import greetTI from "./greet-ti";
import {createCheckers} from "ts-interface-checker";

const {Greeter} = createCheckers(greetTI);

Greeter.methodArgs("greet").check(["Bob"]);     // OK
Greeter.methodArgs("greet").check([17]);        // Fails with "value.name is not a string"
Greeter.methodArgs("greet").check([]);          // Fails with "value.name is missing"

Greeter.methodResult("greet").check("hello");   // OK
Greeter.methodResult("greet").check(null);      // Fails with "value is not a string"

Type suites

If one type refers to a type defined in another file, you need to tell the interface checker about all type names when you call createCheckers(). E.g. given

// color.ts
export type Color = RGB | string;
export type RGB = [number, number, number];
// shape.ts
import {Color} from "./color";
export interface Square {
  size: number;
  color?: Color;
}

the produced files color-ti.ts and shape-ti.ts do not automatically refer to each other, but expect you to relate them in createCheckers() call:

import color from "./color-ti";
import shape from "./shape-ti";
import {createCheckers} from "ts-interface-checker";

const {Square} = createCheckers(shape, color);    // Pass in all required type suites.

Square.check({size: 1, color: [255,255,255]});

Strict checking

You may check that data contains no extra properties. Note that it is not generally recommended as it this prevents backward compatibility: if you add new properties to an interface, then older code with strict checks will not accept them.

Following on the example above:

Square.strictCheck({size: 1, color: [255,255,255], bg: "blue"});    // Fails with value.bg is extraneous
Square.strictCheck({size: 1, color: [255,255,255,0.5]});            // Fails with ...value.color[3] is extraneous

Type guards

Standard Checker objects do the type checking logic, but are unable to make the TypeScript compiler aware that an object of unknown type implements a certain interface.

Basic code:

const unk: unknown = {size: 1, color: "green"};
// Type is unknown, so TypeScript will not let you access the members.
console.log(unk.size); // Error: "Object is of type 'unknown'"

With a Checker available:

import fooTI from "./foo-ti";
import {createCheckers} from "ts-interface-checker";

const {Square} = createCheckers(fooTI);

const unk: unknown = {size: 1, color: "green"};

if (Square.test(unk)) {
  // unk does implement Square, but TypeScript is not aware of it.
  console.log(unk.size); // Error: "Object is of type 'unknown'"
}

To enable type guard functionality on the existing test, and strictTest functions, Checker objects should be cast to CheckerT<> using the appropriate type.

Using CheckerT<>:

import {Square} from "./foo";
import fooTI from "./foo-ti";
import {createCheckers, CheckerT} from "ts-interface-checker";

const {Square} = createCheckers(fooTI) as {Square: CheckerT<Square>};

const unk: unknown = {size: 1, color: "green"};

if (Square.test(unk)) {
  // TypeScript is now aware that unk implements Square, and allows member access.
  console.log(unk.size);
}

Type assertions

CheckerT<> will eventually support type assertions using the check and strictCheck functions, however, this feature is not yet fully working in TypeScript.