DEV Community

Zaid Rehman
Zaid Rehman

Posted on

Record and Tuples - New Datatypes in JavaScript

Record (Analogous to objects) and Tuple (Analogous to arrays) are the new types that are coming soon in JavaScript. At the time of writing, they are in Stage 1.

Syntax
Notice the # before curly braces or square bracket. This is the Syntactical difference between objects/arrays and records/tuples.

const record = #{
    foo: "FOO",
    bar: "BAR"
};
const tuple = #["FOO", "BAR"]
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Deep Immautablity
Record and Tuple are deeply immutable, unlike Object.freeze. The value of a record/tuple or the values inside nested record/tuples cannot be changed once it is defined.

const record = #{
    foo: "FOO",
    bar: "BAR",
    foobar: #["FOO", "BAR"]
};
const tuple = #["FOO", "BAR", #{foo: "FOO", bar: "BAR"}]

record.foo = "BAR" // Error
record.foobar[0] = "BAR" // Error
tuple[0] = "BAR" // Error
tuple[2].foo = "BAR" // Error
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Deep Equality
IMO this is the best feature of record/tuple. In objects and arrays, you can only compare by their reference but in a record or a tuple, you can compare by its values. It is also possible to compare values of nested record/tuple

const record2 = #{foo: "FOO", bar: "BAR", foobar: #["FOO", "BAR"]}
const tuple2 = #["FOO", "BAR", #{foo: "FOO", bar: "BAR"}]

record.foobar === #["FOO", "BAR"] // true
tuple[2] ===  #{foo: "FOO", bar: "BAR"} // true

record === record2 // true
tuple === tuple2 // true
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Features same as Object/Array
You can use them just like you use objects and arrays.
Computed property names, shorthand notation, spread operator, Destructuring, rest operator.

const f = "foo"
const bar = "BAR"
const values = #{a: 1, b: 2}

const record = #{
    [f]: "FOO",     // Computed property names
    bar,            // Short hand notation
    ...values       // Spread operator
};

console.log(record.foo == "FOO") // true
console.log(record.bar == "BAR") // true
console.log(record.a == 1) // true
console.log(record.b == 2) // true

const { foo: destructedFOO, ...rest } = record //  Destructuring and rest operator

console.log(destructedFOO == "FOO") // true
console.log(rest.a == 1) // true
console.log(rest.b == 2) // true
console.log(rest.bar == "BAR") // true
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Limitations
Cannot use Record and Tuples on lhs while destructuring, symbol key not supported in the record, the nested Object/Array/Class can not be converted to record.

// Using a record or tuple literal on the lhs is a SyntaxError
const #{ a, b } = #{ a: 1, b: 2 } // SyntaxError
const #[a, b] = #[1, 2] // SyntaxError

// Record and Tuples only support primitive data types 
const record = #{ instance: new SomeClass()} //Error
const record = #{ object: { a: 1}} //Error
const tuples = #[new SomeClass()] // Error
const tuples = #[1, [2]] // Error

// Records can only have String keys, not Symbol keys
const record = #{ [Symbol()]: #{} }; //Error
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Top comments (3)

Collapse
 
sebastienlorber profile image
Sebastien Lorber • Edited

Nice intro ;)

For those interested, I've written a very detailed article on how I'd use these in a React codebase, and what kind of problems they would solve:

Records & Tuples for React

Collapse
 
zaidrehman profile image
Zaid Rehman

Good read

Collapse
 
karimshalapy profile image
Karim Shalapy

Deep equality ๐Ÿ˜ฒ๐Ÿ˜ฒ!!

If only we could destructure them...