Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jack Franklin
de4f08dc52
chore: migrate src/Page.js to TypeScript (#5809)
* chore: migrate src/Page.js to TypeScript

The final one! This is a huge file and needs to be split up and tidied,
but for now I've left all the definitions in place and converted types
accordingly.

There's some additional tidying we can do now every `src` file is TS,
but I'll leave that for another PR to avoid this one getting any bigger.

Co-authored-by: Mathias Bynens <mathias@qiwi.be>
2020-05-05 13:53:22 +01:00
Paul Lewis
4a47867a24
feat: add support for string-based custom queries (#5753) 2020-04-30 12:45:52 +01:00
Jack Franklin
8a5008e30b
chore: migrate src/FrameManager to TypeScript (#5773) 2020-04-29 13:28:16 +02:00
Paul Lewis
79e82e5b65
fix: make uploadFile throw for non-existent files (#5733) 2020-04-24 13:36:46 +02:00
Jack Franklin
133abb07cf
chore: migrate src/Input to typescript (#5710)
* chore: migrate src/Input to typescript

This moves `Keyboard`, `Mouse` and `Touchscreen` to TypeScript. We gain
some nice TS benefits here; by creating a type for all the keycodes we
support we can type the input args as that rather than `string` which
will hopefully save some users some debugging once we ship our TS types
in a future version.

* Remove from externs file

* Update utils/doclint/check_public_api/index.js

Co-Authored-By: Mathias Bynens <mathias@qiwi.be>

Co-authored-by: Mathias Bynens <mathias@qiwi.be>
2020-04-22 15:44:04 +01:00
Jack Franklin
29ebd0bb3e
chore: migrate src/ExecutionContext (#5705)
* chore: migrate src/ExecutionContext to TypeScript

I spent a while trying to decide on the best course of action for
typing the `evaluate` function.

Ideally I wanted to use generics so that as a user you could type
something like:

```
handle.evaluate<HTMLElement, number, boolean>((node, x) => true, 5)
```

And have TypeScript know the arguments of `node` and `x` based on those
generics. But I hit two problems with that:

* you have to have n overloads of `evaluate` to cope for as many number
of arguments as you can be bothered too (e.g. we'd need an overload for
1 arg, 2 args, 3 args, etc)
* I decided it's actually confusing because you don't know as a user
what those generics actually map to.

So in the end I went with one generic which is the return type of the
function:

```
handle.evaluate<boolean>((node, x) => true, 5)
```

And `node` and `x` get typed as `any` which means you can tell TS
yourself:

```
handle.evaluate<boolean>((node: HTMLElement, x:  number) => true, 5)
```

I'd like to find a way to force that the arguments after the function do
match the arguments you've given (in the above example, TS would moan if
I swapped that `5` for `"foo"`), but I tried a few things and to be
honest the complexity of the types wasn't worth it, I don't think.

I'm very open to tweaking these but I'd rather ship this and tweak going
forwards rather than spend hours now tweaking. Once we ship these
typedefs and get feedback from the community I'm sure we can improve
them.
2020-04-22 10:33:44 +01:00
Jack Franklin
8d5d76ed70
chore: migrate src/JSHandle to TS (#5703)
* chore: migrate src/JSHandle to TS

There's a few TODOs in here that all depend on typing the
`ExecutionContext.evaluateHandle` properly so that you can properly
declare what types you're expecting back. Once I've done that file (it's
next on my list) I will loop back and improve the types here, fixing
these TODOs.

* Fix doclint for {}
2020-04-21 12:11:06 +01:00