// Copyright 2018-2024 the Deno authors. All rights reserved. MIT license. /// /// /// /// /// declare namespace Deno { export {}; // stop default export type behavior /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * Creates a presentable WebGPU surface from given window and * display handles. * * The parameters correspond to the table below: * * | system | winHandle | displayHandle | * | ----------------- | ------------- | --------------- | * | "cocoa" (macOS) | `NSView*` | - | * | "win32" (Windows) | `HWND` | `HINSTANCE` | * | "x11" (Linux) | Xlib `Window` | Xlib `Display*` | * | "wayland" (Linux) | `wl_surface*` | `wl_display*` | * * @category GPU * @experimental */ export class UnsafeWindowSurface { constructor( system: "cocoa" | "win32" | "x11" | "wayland", windowHandle: Deno.PointerValue, displayHandle: Deno.PointerValue, ); getContext(context: "webgpu"): GPUCanvasContext; present(): void; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * Represents membership of a IPv4 multicast group. * * @category Network * @experimental */ export interface MulticastV4Membership { /** Leaves the multicast group. */ leave: () => Promise; /** Sets the multicast loopback option. If enabled, multicast packets will be looped back to the local socket. */ setLoopback: (loopback: boolean) => Promise; /** Sets the time-to-live of outgoing multicast packets for this socket. */ setTTL: (ttl: number) => Promise; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * Represents membership of a IPv6 multicast group. * * @category Network * @experimental */ export interface MulticastV6Membership { /** Leaves the multicast group. */ leave: () => Promise; /** Sets the multicast loopback option. If enabled, multicast packets will be looped back to the local socket. */ setLoopback: (loopback: boolean) => Promise; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * A generic transport listener for message-oriented protocols. * * @category Network * @experimental */ export interface DatagramConn extends AsyncIterable<[Uint8Array, Addr]> { /** Joins an IPv4 multicast group. */ joinMulticastV4( address: string, networkInterface: string, ): Promise; /** Joins an IPv6 multicast group. */ joinMulticastV6( address: string, networkInterface: number, ): Promise; /** Waits for and resolves to the next message to the instance. * * Messages are received in the format of a tuple containing the data array * and the address information. */ receive(p?: Uint8Array): Promise<[Uint8Array, Addr]>; /** Sends a message to the target via the connection. The method resolves * with the number of bytes sent. */ send(p: Uint8Array, addr: Addr): Promise; /** Close closes the socket. Any pending message promises will be rejected * with errors. */ close(): void; /** Return the address of the instance. */ readonly addr: Addr; [Symbol.asyncIterator](): AsyncIterableIterator<[Uint8Array, Addr]>; } /** * @category Network * @experimental */ export interface TcpListenOptions extends ListenOptions { /** When `true` the SO_REUSEPORT flag will be set on the listener. This * allows multiple processes to listen on the same address and port. * * On Linux this will cause the kernel to distribute incoming connections * across the different processes that are listening on the same address and * port. * * This flag is only supported on Linux. It is silently ignored on other * platforms. * * @default {false} */ reusePort?: boolean; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * Unstable options which can be set when opening a datagram listener via * {@linkcode Deno.listenDatagram}. * * @category Network * @experimental */ export interface UdpListenOptions extends ListenOptions { /** When `true` the specified address will be reused, even if another * process has already bound a socket on it. This effectively steals the * socket from the listener. * * @default {false} */ reuseAddress?: boolean; /** When `true`, sent multicast packets will be looped back to the local socket. * * @default {false} */ loopback?: boolean; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * Listen announces on the local transport address. * * ```ts * const listener1 = Deno.listenDatagram({ * port: 80, * transport: "udp" * }); * const listener2 = Deno.listenDatagram({ * hostname: "golang.org", * port: 80, * transport: "udp" * }); * ``` * * Requires `allow-net` permission. * * @tags allow-net * @category Network * @experimental */ export function listenDatagram( options: UdpListenOptions & { transport: "udp" }, ): DatagramConn; /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * Listen announces on the local transport address. * * ```ts * const listener = Deno.listenDatagram({ * path: "/foo/bar.sock", * transport: "unixpacket" * }); * ``` * * Requires `allow-read` and `allow-write` permission. * * @tags allow-read, allow-write * @category Network * @experimental */ export function listenDatagram( options: UnixListenOptions & { transport: "unixpacket" }, ): DatagramConn; /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * Open a new {@linkcode Deno.Kv} connection to persist data. * * When a path is provided, the database will be persisted to disk at that * path. Read and write access to the file is required. * * When no path is provided, the database will be opened in a default path for * the current script. This location is persistent across script runs and is * keyed on the origin storage key (the same key that is used to determine * `localStorage` persistence). More information about the origin storage key * can be found in the Deno Manual. * * @tags allow-read, allow-write * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export function openKv(path?: string): Promise; /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * CronScheduleExpression is used as the type of `minute`, `hour`, * `dayOfMonth`, `month`, and `dayOfWeek` in {@linkcode CronSchedule}. * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export type CronScheduleExpression = number | { exact: number | number[] } | { start?: number; end?: number; every?: number; }; /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * CronSchedule is the interface used for JSON format * cron `schedule`. * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export interface CronSchedule { minute?: CronScheduleExpression; hour?: CronScheduleExpression; dayOfMonth?: CronScheduleExpression; month?: CronScheduleExpression; dayOfWeek?: CronScheduleExpression; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * Create a cron job that will periodically execute the provided handler * callback based on the specified schedule. * * ```ts * Deno.cron("sample cron", "20 * * * *", () => { * console.log("cron job executed"); * }); * ``` * * ```ts * Deno.cron("sample cron", { hour: { every: 6 } }, () => { * console.log("cron job executed"); * }); * ``` * * `schedule` can be a string in the Unix cron format or in JSON format * as specified by interface {@linkcode CronSchedule}, where time is specified * using UTC time zone. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export function cron( name: string, schedule: string | CronSchedule, handler: () => Promise | void, ): Promise; /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * Create a cron job that will periodically execute the provided handler * callback based on the specified schedule. * * ```ts * Deno.cron("sample cron", "20 * * * *", { * backoffSchedule: [10, 20] * }, () => { * console.log("cron job executed"); * }); * ``` * * `schedule` can be a string in the Unix cron format or in JSON format * as specified by interface {@linkcode CronSchedule}, where time is specified * using UTC time zone. * * `backoffSchedule` option can be used to specify the retry policy for failed * executions. Each element in the array represents the number of milliseconds * to wait before retrying the execution. For example, `[1000, 5000, 10000]` * means that a failed execution will be retried at most 3 times, with 1 * second, 5 seconds, and 10 seconds delay between each retry. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export function cron( name: string, schedule: string | CronSchedule, options: { backoffSchedule?: number[]; signal?: AbortSignal }, handler: () => Promise | void, ): Promise; /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * A key to be persisted in a {@linkcode Deno.Kv}. A key is a sequence * of {@linkcode Deno.KvKeyPart}s. * * Keys are ordered lexicographically by their parts. The first part is the * most significant, and the last part is the least significant. The order of * the parts is determined by both the type and the value of the part. The * relative significance of the types can be found in documentation for the * {@linkcode Deno.KvKeyPart} type. * * Keys have a maximum size of 2048 bytes serialized. If the size of the key * exceeds this limit, an error will be thrown on the operation that this key * was passed to. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export type KvKey = readonly KvKeyPart[]; /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * A single part of a {@linkcode Deno.KvKey}. Parts are ordered * lexicographically, first by their type, and within a given type by their * value. * * The ordering of types is as follows: * * 1. `Uint8Array` * 2. `string` * 3. `number` * 4. `bigint` * 5. `boolean` * * Within a given type, the ordering is as follows: * * - `Uint8Array` is ordered by the byte ordering of the array * - `string` is ordered by the byte ordering of the UTF-8 encoding of the * string * - `number` is ordered following this pattern: `-NaN` * < `-Infinity` < `-100.0` < `-1.0` < -`0.5` < `-0.0` < `0.0` < `0.5` * < `1.0` < `100.0` < `Infinity` < `NaN` * - `bigint` is ordered by mathematical ordering, with the largest negative * number being the least first value, and the largest positive number * being the last value * - `boolean` is ordered by `false` < `true` * * This means that the part `1.0` (a number) is ordered before the part `2.0` * (also a number), but is greater than the part `0n` (a bigint), because * `1.0` is a number and `0n` is a bigint, and type ordering has precedence * over the ordering of values within a type. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export type KvKeyPart = | Uint8Array | string | number | bigint | boolean | symbol; /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * Consistency level of a KV operation. * * - `strong` - This operation must be strongly-consistent. * - `eventual` - Eventually-consistent behavior is allowed. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export type KvConsistencyLevel = "strong" | "eventual"; /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * A selector that selects the range of data returned by a list operation on a * {@linkcode Deno.Kv}. * * The selector can either be a prefix selector or a range selector. A prefix * selector selects all keys that start with the given prefix (optionally * starting at a given key). A range selector selects all keys that are * lexicographically between the given start and end keys. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export type KvListSelector = | { prefix: KvKey } | { prefix: KvKey; start: KvKey } | { prefix: KvKey; end: KvKey } | { start: KvKey; end: KvKey }; /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * A mutation to a key in a {@linkcode Deno.Kv}. A mutation is a * combination of a key, a value, and a type. The type determines how the * mutation is applied to the key. * * - `set` - Sets the value of the key to the given value, overwriting any * existing value. Optionally an `expireIn` option can be specified to * set a time-to-live (TTL) for the key. The TTL is specified in * milliseconds, and the key will be deleted from the database at earliest * after the specified number of milliseconds have elapsed. Once the * specified duration has passed, the key may still be visible for some * additional time. If the `expireIn` option is not specified, the key will * not expire. * - `delete` - Deletes the key from the database. The mutation is a no-op if * the key does not exist. * - `sum` - Adds the given value to the existing value of the key. Both the * value specified in the mutation, and any existing value must be of type * `Deno.KvU64`. If the key does not exist, the value is set to the given * value (summed with 0). If the result of the sum overflows an unsigned * 64-bit integer, the result is wrapped around. * - `max` - Sets the value of the key to the maximum of the existing value * and the given value. Both the value specified in the mutation, and any * existing value must be of type `Deno.KvU64`. If the key does not exist, * the value is set to the given value. * - `min` - Sets the value of the key to the minimum of the existing value * and the given value. Both the value specified in the mutation, and any * existing value must be of type `Deno.KvU64`. If the key does not exist, * the value is set to the given value. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export type KvMutation = & { key: KvKey } & ( | { type: "set"; value: unknown; expireIn?: number } | { type: "delete" } | { type: "sum"; value: KvU64 } | { type: "max"; value: KvU64 } | { type: "min"; value: KvU64 } ); /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * An iterator over a range of data entries in a {@linkcode Deno.Kv}. * * The cursor getter returns the cursor that can be used to resume the * iteration from the current position in the future. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export class KvListIterator implements AsyncIterableIterator> { /** * Returns the cursor of the current position in the iteration. This cursor * can be used to resume the iteration from the current position in the * future by passing it to the `cursor` option of the `list` method. */ get cursor(): string; next(): Promise, undefined>>; [Symbol.asyncIterator](): AsyncIterableIterator>; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * A versioned pair of key and value in a {@linkcode Deno.Kv}. * * The `versionstamp` is a string that represents the current version of the * key-value pair. It can be used to perform atomic operations on the KV store * by passing it to the `check` method of a {@linkcode Deno.AtomicOperation}. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export type KvEntry = { key: KvKey; value: T; versionstamp: string }; /** * **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * An optional versioned pair of key and value in a {@linkcode Deno.Kv}. * * This is the same as a {@linkcode KvEntry}, but the `value` and `versionstamp` * fields may be `null` if no value exists for the given key in the KV store. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export type KvEntryMaybe = KvEntry | { key: KvKey; value: null; versionstamp: null; }; /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * Options for listing key-value pairs in a {@linkcode Deno.Kv}. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export interface KvListOptions { /** * The maximum number of key-value pairs to return. If not specified, all * matching key-value pairs will be returned. */ limit?: number; /** * The cursor to resume the iteration from. If not specified, the iteration * will start from the beginning. */ cursor?: string; /** * Whether to reverse the order of the returned key-value pairs. If not * specified, the order will be ascending from the start of the range as per * the lexicographical ordering of the keys. If `true`, the order will be * descending from the end of the range. * * The default value is `false`. */ reverse?: boolean; /** * The consistency level of the list operation. The default consistency * level is "strong". Some use cases can benefit from using a weaker * consistency level. For more information on consistency levels, see the * documentation for {@linkcode Deno.KvConsistencyLevel}. * * List operations are performed in batches (in sizes specified by the * `batchSize` option). The consistency level of the list operation is * applied to each batch individually. This means that while each batch is * guaranteed to be consistent within itself, the entire list operation may * not be consistent across batches because a mutation may be applied to a * key-value pair between batches, in a batch that has already been returned * by the list operation. */ consistency?: KvConsistencyLevel; /** * The size of the batches in which the list operation is performed. Larger * or smaller batch sizes may positively or negatively affect the * performance of a list operation depending on the specific use case and * iteration behavior. Slow iterating queries may benefit from using a * smaller batch size for increased overall consistency, while fast * iterating queries may benefit from using a larger batch size for better * performance. * * The default batch size is equal to the `limit` option, or 100 if this is * unset. The maximum value for this option is 500. Larger values will be * clamped. */ batchSize?: number; } /** * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export interface KvCommitResult { ok: true; /** The versionstamp of the value committed to KV. */ versionstamp: string; } /** * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export interface KvCommitError { ok: false; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * A check to perform as part of a {@linkcode Deno.AtomicOperation}. The check * will fail if the versionstamp for the key-value pair in the KV store does * not match the given versionstamp. A check with a `null` versionstamp checks * that the key-value pair does not currently exist in the KV store. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export interface AtomicCheck { key: KvKey; versionstamp: string | null; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * An operation on a {@linkcode Deno.Kv} that can be performed * atomically. Atomic operations do not auto-commit, and must be committed * explicitly by calling the `commit` method. * * Atomic operations can be used to perform multiple mutations on the KV store * in a single atomic transaction. They can also be used to perform * conditional mutations by specifying one or more * {@linkcode Deno.AtomicCheck}s that ensure that a mutation is only performed * if the key-value pair in the KV has a specific versionstamp. If any of the * checks fail, the entire operation will fail and no mutations will be made. * * The ordering of mutations is guaranteed to be the same as the ordering of * the mutations specified in the operation. Checks are performed before any * mutations are performed. The ordering of checks is unobservable. * * Atomic operations can be used to implement optimistic locking, where a * mutation is only performed if the key-value pair in the KV store has not * been modified since the last read. This can be done by specifying a check * that ensures that the versionstamp of the key-value pair matches the * versionstamp that was read. If the check fails, the mutation will not be * performed and the operation will fail. One can then retry the read-modify- * write operation in a loop until it succeeds. * * The `commit` method of an atomic operation returns a value indicating * whether checks passed and mutations were performed. If the operation failed * because of a failed check, the return value will be a * {@linkcode Deno.KvCommitError} with an `ok: false` property. If the * operation failed for any other reason (storage error, invalid value, etc.), * an exception will be thrown. If the operation succeeded, the return value * will be a {@linkcode Deno.KvCommitResult} object with a `ok: true` property * and the versionstamp of the value committed to KV. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export class AtomicOperation { /** * Add to the operation a check that ensures that the versionstamp of the * key-value pair in the KV store matches the given versionstamp. If the * check fails, the entire operation will fail and no mutations will be * performed during the commit. */ check(...checks: AtomicCheck[]): this; /** * Add to the operation a mutation that performs the specified mutation on * the specified key if all checks pass during the commit. The types and * semantics of all available mutations are described in the documentation * for {@linkcode Deno.KvMutation}. */ mutate(...mutations: KvMutation[]): this; /** * Shortcut for creating a `sum` mutation. This method wraps `n` in a * {@linkcode Deno.KvU64}, so the value of `n` must be in the range * `[0, 2^64-1]`. */ sum(key: KvKey, n: bigint): this; /** * Shortcut for creating a `min` mutation. This method wraps `n` in a * {@linkcode Deno.KvU64}, so the value of `n` must be in the range * `[0, 2^64-1]`. */ min(key: KvKey, n: bigint): this; /** * Shortcut for creating a `max` mutation. This method wraps `n` in a * {@linkcode Deno.KvU64}, so the value of `n` must be in the range * `[0, 2^64-1]`. */ max(key: KvKey, n: bigint): this; /** * Add to the operation a mutation that sets the value of the specified key * to the specified value if all checks pass during the commit. * * Optionally an `expireIn` option can be specified to set a time-to-live * (TTL) for the key. The TTL is specified in milliseconds, and the key will * be deleted from the database at earliest after the specified number of * milliseconds have elapsed. Once the specified duration has passed, the * key may still be visible for some additional time. If the `expireIn` * option is not specified, the key will not expire. */ set(key: KvKey, value: unknown, options?: { expireIn?: number }): this; /** * Add to the operation a mutation that deletes the specified key if all * checks pass during the commit. */ delete(key: KvKey): this; /** * Add to the operation a mutation that enqueues a value into the queue * if all checks pass during the commit. */ enqueue( value: unknown, options?: { delay?: number; keysIfUndelivered?: Deno.KvKey[]; backoffSchedule?: number[]; }, ): this; /** * Commit the operation to the KV store. Returns a value indicating whether * checks passed and mutations were performed. If the operation failed * because of a failed check, the return value will be a {@linkcode * Deno.KvCommitError} with an `ok: false` property. If the operation failed * for any other reason (storage error, invalid value, etc.), an exception * will be thrown. If the operation succeeded, the return value will be a * {@linkcode Deno.KvCommitResult} object with a `ok: true` property and the * versionstamp of the value committed to KV. * * If the commit returns `ok: false`, one may create a new atomic operation * with updated checks and mutations and attempt to commit it again. See the * note on optimistic locking in the documentation for * {@linkcode Deno.AtomicOperation}. */ commit(): Promise; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * A key-value database that can be used to store and retrieve data. * * Data is stored as key-value pairs, where the key is a {@linkcode Deno.KvKey} * and the value is an arbitrary structured-serializable JavaScript value. * Keys are ordered lexicographically as described in the documentation for * {@linkcode Deno.KvKey}. Keys are unique within a database, and the last * value set for a given key is the one that is returned when reading the * key. Keys can be deleted from the database, in which case they will no * longer be returned when reading keys. * * Values can be any structured-serializable JavaScript value (objects, * arrays, strings, numbers, etc.). The special value {@linkcode Deno.KvU64} * can be used to store 64-bit unsigned integers in the database. This special * value can not be nested within other objects or arrays. In addition to the * regular database mutation operations, the unsigned 64-bit integer value * also supports `sum`, `max`, and `min` mutations. * * Keys are versioned on write by assigning the key an ever-increasing * "versionstamp". The versionstamp represents the version of a key-value pair * in the database at some point in time, and can be used to perform * transactional operations on the database without requiring any locking. * This is enabled by atomic operations, which can have conditions that ensure * that the operation only succeeds if the versionstamp of the key-value pair * matches an expected versionstamp. * * Keys have a maximum length of 2048 bytes after serialization. Values have a * maximum length of 64 KiB after serialization. Serialization of both keys * and values is somewhat opaque, but one can usually assume that the * serialization of any value is about the same length as the resulting string * of a JSON serialization of that same value. If theses limits are exceeded, * an exception will be thrown. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export class Kv implements Disposable { /** * Retrieve the value and versionstamp for the given key from the database * in the form of a {@linkcode Deno.KvEntryMaybe}. If no value exists for * the key, the returned entry will have a `null` value and versionstamp. * * ```ts * const db = await Deno.openKv(); * const result = await db.get(["foo"]); * result.key; // ["foo"] * result.value; // "bar" * result.versionstamp; // "00000000000000010000" * ``` * * The `consistency` option can be used to specify the consistency level * for the read operation. The default consistency level is "strong". Some * use cases can benefit from using a weaker consistency level. For more * information on consistency levels, see the documentation for * {@linkcode Deno.KvConsistencyLevel}. */ get( key: KvKey, options?: { consistency?: KvConsistencyLevel }, ): Promise>; /** * Retrieve multiple values and versionstamps from the database in the form * of an array of {@linkcode Deno.KvEntryMaybe} objects. The returned array * will have the same length as the `keys` array, and the entries will be in * the same order as the keys. If no value exists for a given key, the * returned entry will have a `null` value and versionstamp. * * ```ts * const db = await Deno.openKv(); * const result = await db.getMany([["foo"], ["baz"]]); * result[0].key; // ["foo"] * result[0].value; // "bar" * result[0].versionstamp; // "00000000000000010000" * result[1].key; // ["baz"] * result[1].value; // null * result[1].versionstamp; // null * ``` * * The `consistency` option can be used to specify the consistency level * for the read operation. The default consistency level is "strong". Some * use cases can benefit from using a weaker consistency level. For more * information on consistency levels, see the documentation for * {@linkcode Deno.KvConsistencyLevel}. */ getMany( keys: readonly [...{ [K in keyof T]: KvKey }], options?: { consistency?: KvConsistencyLevel }, ): Promise<{ [K in keyof T]: KvEntryMaybe }>; /** * Set the value for the given key in the database. If a value already * exists for the key, it will be overwritten. * * ```ts * const db = await Deno.openKv(); * await db.set(["foo"], "bar"); * ``` * * Optionally an `expireIn` option can be specified to set a time-to-live * (TTL) for the key. The TTL is specified in milliseconds, and the key will * be deleted from the database at earliest after the specified number of * milliseconds have elapsed. Once the specified duration has passed, the * key may still be visible for some additional time. If the `expireIn` * option is not specified, the key will not expire. */ set( key: KvKey, value: unknown, options?: { expireIn?: number }, ): Promise; /** * Delete the value for the given key from the database. If no value exists * for the key, this operation is a no-op. * * ```ts * const db = await Deno.openKv(); * await db.delete(["foo"]); * ``` */ delete(key: KvKey): Promise; /** * Retrieve a list of keys in the database. The returned list is an * {@linkcode Deno.KvListIterator} which can be used to iterate over the * entries in the database. * * Each list operation must specify a selector which is used to specify the * range of keys to return. The selector can either be a prefix selector, or * a range selector: * * - A prefix selector selects all keys that start with the given prefix of * key parts. For example, the selector `["users"]` will select all keys * that start with the prefix `["users"]`, such as `["users", "alice"]` * and `["users", "bob"]`. Note that you can not partially match a key * part, so the selector `["users", "a"]` will not match the key * `["users", "alice"]`. A prefix selector may specify a `start` key that * is used to skip over keys that are lexicographically less than the * start key. * - A range selector selects all keys that are lexicographically between * the given start and end keys (including the start, and excluding the * end). For example, the selector `["users", "a"], ["users", "n"]` will * select all keys that start with the prefix `["users"]` and have a * second key part that is lexicographically between `a` and `n`, such as * `["users", "alice"]`, `["users", "bob"]`, and `["users", "mike"]`, but * not `["users", "noa"]` or `["users", "zoe"]`. * * ```ts * const db = await Deno.openKv(); * const entries = db.list({ prefix: ["users"] }); * for await (const entry of entries) { * entry.key; // ["users", "alice"] * entry.value; // { name: "Alice" } * entry.versionstamp; // "00000000000000010000" * } * ``` * * The `options` argument can be used to specify additional options for the * list operation. See the documentation for {@linkcode Deno.KvListOptions} * for more information. */ list( selector: KvListSelector, options?: KvListOptions, ): KvListIterator; /** * Add a value into the database queue to be delivered to the queue * listener via {@linkcode Deno.Kv.listenQueue}. * * ```ts * const db = await Deno.openKv(); * await db.enqueue("bar"); * ``` * * The `delay` option can be used to specify the delay (in milliseconds) * of the value delivery. The default delay is 0, which means immediate * delivery. * * ```ts * const db = await Deno.openKv(); * await db.enqueue("bar", { delay: 60000 }); * ``` * * The `keysIfUndelivered` option can be used to specify the keys to * be set if the value is not successfully delivered to the queue * listener after several attempts. The values are set to the value of * the queued message. * * The `backoffSchedule` option can be used to specify the retry policy for * failed message delivery. Each element in the array represents the number of * milliseconds to wait before retrying the delivery. For example, * `[1000, 5000, 10000]` means that a failed delivery will be retried * at most 3 times, with 1 second, 5 seconds, and 10 seconds delay * between each retry. * * ```ts * const db = await Deno.openKv(); * await db.enqueue("bar", { * keysIfUndelivered: [["foo", "bar"]], * backoffSchedule: [1000, 5000, 10000], * }); * ``` */ enqueue( value: unknown, options?: { delay?: number; keysIfUndelivered?: Deno.KvKey[]; backoffSchedule?: number[]; }, ): Promise; /** * Listen for queue values to be delivered from the database queue, which * were enqueued with {@linkcode Deno.Kv.enqueue}. The provided handler * callback is invoked on every dequeued value. A failed callback * invocation is automatically retried multiple times until it succeeds * or until the maximum number of retries is reached. * * ```ts * const db = await Deno.openKv(); * db.listenQueue(async (msg: unknown) => { * await db.set(["foo"], msg); * }); * ``` */ // deno-lint-ignore no-explicit-any listenQueue(handler: (value: any) => Promise | void): Promise; /** * Create a new {@linkcode Deno.AtomicOperation} object which can be used to * perform an atomic transaction on the database. This does not perform any * operations on the database - the atomic transaction must be committed * explicitly using the {@linkcode Deno.AtomicOperation.commit} method once * all checks and mutations have been added to the operation. */ atomic(): AtomicOperation; /** * Watch for changes to the given keys in the database. The returned stream * is a {@linkcode ReadableStream} that emits a new value whenever any of * the watched keys change their versionstamp. The emitted value is an array * of {@linkcode Deno.KvEntryMaybe} objects, with the same length and order * as the `keys` array. If no value exists for a given key, the returned * entry will have a `null` value and versionstamp. * * The returned stream does not return every single intermediate state of * the watched keys, but rather only keeps you up to date with the latest * state of the keys. This means that if a key is modified multiple times * quickly, you may not receive a notification for every single change, but * rather only the latest state of the key. * * ```ts * const db = await Deno.openKv(); * * const stream = db.watch([["foo"], ["bar"]]); * for await (const entries of stream) { * entries[0].key; // ["foo"] * entries[0].value; // "bar" * entries[0].versionstamp; // "00000000000000010000" * entries[1].key; // ["bar"] * entries[1].value; // null * entries[1].versionstamp; // null * } * ``` * * The `options` argument can be used to specify additional options for the * watch operation. The `raw` option can be used to specify whether a new * value should be emitted whenever a mutation occurs on any of the watched * keys (even if the value of the key does not change, such as deleting a * deleted key), or only when entries have observably changed in some way. * When `raw: true` is used, it is possible for the stream to occasionally * emit values even if no mutations have occurred on any of the watched * keys. The default value for this option is `false`. */ watch( keys: readonly [...{ [K in keyof T]: KvKey }], options?: { raw?: boolean }, ): ReadableStream<{ [K in keyof T]: KvEntryMaybe }>; /** * Close the database connection. This will prevent any further operations * from being performed on the database, and interrupt any in-flight * operations immediately. */ close(): void; /** * Get a symbol that represents the versionstamp of the current atomic * operation. This symbol can be used as the last part of a key in * `.set()`, both directly on the `Kv` object and on an `AtomicOperation` * object created from this `Kv` instance. */ commitVersionstamp(): symbol; [Symbol.dispose](): void; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * Wrapper type for 64-bit unsigned integers for use as values in a * {@linkcode Deno.Kv}. * * @category Cloud * @experimental */ export class KvU64 { /** Create a new `KvU64` instance from the given bigint value. If the value * is signed or greater than 64-bits, an error will be thrown. */ constructor(value: bigint); /** The value of this unsigned 64-bit integer, represented as a bigint. */ readonly value: bigint; } /** * A namespace containing runtime APIs available in Jupyter notebooks. * * When accessed outside of Jupyter notebook context an error will be thrown. * * @category Jupyter * @experimental */ export namespace jupyter { /** * @category Jupyter * @experimental */ export interface DisplayOptions { raw?: boolean; update?: boolean; display_id?: string; } /** * @category Jupyter * @experimental */ export type VegaObject = { $schema: string; [key: string]: unknown; }; /** * A collection of supported media types and data for Jupyter frontends. * * @category Jupyter * @experimental */ export type MediaBundle = { "text/plain"?: string; "text/html"?: string; "image/svg+xml"?: string; "text/markdown"?: string; "application/javascript"?: string; // Images (per Jupyter spec) must be base64 encoded. We could _allow_ // accepting Uint8Array or ArrayBuffer within `display` calls, however we still // must encode them for jupyter. "image/png"?: string; // WISH: Uint8Array | ArrayBuffer "image/jpeg"?: string; // WISH: Uint8Array | ArrayBuffer "image/gif"?: string; // WISH: Uint8Array | ArrayBuffer "application/pdf"?: string; // WISH: Uint8Array | ArrayBuffer // NOTE: all JSON types must be objects at the top level (no arrays, strings, or other primitives) "application/json"?: object; "application/geo+json"?: object; "application/vdom.v1+json"?: object; "application/vnd.plotly.v1+json"?: object; "application/vnd.vega.v5+json"?: VegaObject; "application/vnd.vegalite.v4+json"?: VegaObject; "application/vnd.vegalite.v5+json"?: VegaObject; // Must support a catch all for custom media types / mimetypes [key: string]: string | object | undefined; }; /** * @category Jupyter * @experimental */ export const $display: unique symbol; /** * @category Jupyter * @experimental */ export type Displayable = { [$display]: () => MediaBundle | Promise; }; /** * Display function for Jupyter Deno Kernel. * Mimics the behavior of IPython's `display(obj, raw=True)` function to allow * asynchronous displaying of objects in Jupyter. * * @param obj - The object to be displayed * @param options - Display options with a default { raw: true } * @category Jupyter * @experimental */ export function display( obj: unknown, options?: DisplayOptions, ): Promise; /** * Show Markdown in Jupyter frontends with a tagged template function. * * Takes a template string and returns a displayable object for Jupyter frontends. * * @example * Create a Markdown view. * * ```typescript * const { md } = Deno.jupyter; * md`# Notebooks in TypeScript via Deno ![Deno logo](https://github.com/denoland.png?size=32) * * * TypeScript ${Deno.version.typescript} * * V8 ${Deno.version.v8} * * Deno ${Deno.version.deno} * * Interactive compute with Jupyter _built into Deno_! * ` * ``` * * @category Jupyter * @experimental */ export function md( strings: TemplateStringsArray, ...values: unknown[] ): Displayable; /** * Show HTML in Jupyter frontends with a tagged template function. * * Takes a template string and returns a displayable object for Jupyter frontends. * * @example * Create an HTML view. * ```typescript * const { html } = Deno.jupyter; * html`

Hello, world!

` * ``` * * @category Jupyter * @experimental */ export function html( strings: TemplateStringsArray, ...values: unknown[] ): Displayable; /** * SVG Tagged Template Function. * * Takes a template string and returns a displayable object for Jupyter frontends. * * Example usage: * * svg` * * ` * * @category Jupyter * @experimental */ export function svg( strings: TemplateStringsArray, ...values: unknown[] ): Displayable; /** * Format an object for displaying in Deno * * @param obj - The object to be displayed * @returns Promise * * @category Jupyter * @experimental */ export function format(obj: unknown): Promise; /** * Broadcast a message on IO pub channel. * * ``` * await Deno.jupyter.broadcast("display_data", { * data: { "text/html": "Processing." }, * metadata: {}, * transient: { display_id: "progress" } * }); * * await new Promise((resolve) => setTimeout(resolve, 500)); * * await Deno.jupyter.broadcast("update_display_data", { * data: { "text/html": "Processing.." }, * metadata: {}, * transient: { display_id: "progress" } * }); * ``` * * @category Jupyter * @experimental */ export function broadcast( msgType: string, content: Record, extra?: { metadata?: Record; buffers?: Uint8Array[]; }, ): Promise; } } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * The [Fetch API](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Fetch_API) * which also supports setting a {@linkcode Deno.HttpClient} which provides a * way to connect via proxies and use custom TLS certificates. * * @tags allow-net, allow-read * @category Fetch * @experimental */ declare function fetch( input: Request | URL | string, init?: RequestInit & { client: Deno.HttpClient }, ): Promise; /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * @category Workers * @experimental */ declare interface WorkerOptions { /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * Configure permissions options to change the level of access the worker will * have. By default it will have no permissions. Note that the permissions * of a worker can't be extended beyond its parent's permissions reach. * * - `"inherit"` will take the permissions of the thread the worker is created * in. * - `"none"` will use the default behavior and have no permission * - A list of routes can be provided that are relative to the file the worker * is created in to limit the access of the worker (read/write permissions * only) * * Example: * * ```ts * // mod.ts * const worker = new Worker( * new URL("deno_worker.ts", import.meta.url).href, { * type: "module", * deno: { * permissions: { * read: true, * }, * }, * } * ); * ``` */ deno?: { /** Set to `"none"` to disable all the permissions in the worker. */ permissions?: Deno.PermissionOptions; }; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * @category WebSockets * @experimental */ declare interface WebSocketStreamOptions { protocols?: string[]; signal?: AbortSignal; headers?: HeadersInit; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * @category WebSockets * @experimental */ declare interface WebSocketConnection { readable: ReadableStream; writable: WritableStream; extensions: string; protocol: string; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * @category WebSockets * @experimental */ declare interface WebSocketCloseInfo { code?: number; reason?: string; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * @tags allow-net * @category WebSockets * @experimental */ declare interface WebSocketStream { url: string; opened: Promise; closed: Promise; close(closeInfo?: WebSocketCloseInfo): void; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * @tags allow-net * @category WebSockets * @experimental */ declare var WebSocketStream: { readonly prototype: WebSocketStream; new (url: string, options?: WebSocketStreamOptions): WebSocketStream; }; /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * @tags allow-net * @category WebSockets * @experimental */ declare interface WebSocketError extends DOMException { readonly closeCode: number; readonly reason: string; } /** **UNSTABLE**: New API, yet to be vetted. * * @tags allow-net * @category WebSockets * @experimental */ declare var WebSocketError: { readonly prototype: WebSocketError; new (message?: string, init?: WebSocketCloseInfo): WebSocketError; }; // Adapted from `tc39/proposal-temporal`: https://github.com/tc39/proposal-temporal/blob/main/polyfill/index.d.ts /** * [Specification](https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/index.html) * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ declare namespace Temporal { /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type ComparisonResult = -1 | 0 | 1; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type RoundingMode = | "ceil" | "floor" | "expand" | "trunc" | "halfCeil" | "halfFloor" | "halfExpand" | "halfTrunc" | "halfEven"; /** * Options for assigning fields using `with()` or entire objects with * `from()`. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type AssignmentOptions = { /** * How to deal with out-of-range values * * - In `'constrain'` mode, out-of-range values are clamped to the nearest * in-range value. * - In `'reject'` mode, out-of-range values will cause the function to * throw a RangeError. * * The default is `'constrain'`. */ overflow?: "constrain" | "reject"; }; /** * Options for assigning fields using `Duration.prototype.with()` or entire * objects with `Duration.from()`, and for arithmetic with * `Duration.prototype.add()` and `Duration.prototype.subtract()`. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type DurationOptions = { /** * How to deal with out-of-range values * * - In `'constrain'` mode, out-of-range values are clamped to the nearest * in-range value. * - In `'balance'` mode, out-of-range values are resolved by balancing them * with the next highest unit. * * The default is `'constrain'`. */ overflow?: "constrain" | "balance"; }; /** * Options for conversions of `Temporal.PlainDateTime` to `Temporal.Instant` * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type ToInstantOptions = { /** * Controls handling of invalid or ambiguous times caused by time zone * offset changes like Daylight Saving time (DST) transitions. * * This option is only relevant if a `DateTime` value does not exist in the * destination time zone (e.g. near "Spring Forward" DST transitions), or * exists more than once (e.g. near "Fall Back" DST transitions). * * In case of ambiguous or nonexistent times, this option controls what * exact time to return: * - `'compatible'`: Equivalent to `'earlier'` for backward transitions like * the start of DST in the Spring, and `'later'` for forward transitions * like the end of DST in the Fall. This matches the behavior of legacy * `Date`, of libraries like moment.js, Luxon, or date-fns, and of * cross-platform standards like [RFC 5545 * (iCalendar)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5545). * - `'earlier'`: The earlier time of two possible times * - `'later'`: The later of two possible times * - `'reject'`: Throw a RangeError instead * * The default is `'compatible'`. */ disambiguation?: "compatible" | "earlier" | "later" | "reject"; }; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type OffsetDisambiguationOptions = { /** * Time zone definitions can change. If an application stores data about * events in the future, then stored data about future events may become * ambiguous, for example if a country permanently abolishes DST. The * `offset` option controls this unusual case. * * - `'use'` always uses the offset (if it's provided) to calculate the * instant. This ensures that the result will match the instant that was * originally stored, even if local clock time is different. * - `'prefer'` uses the offset if it's valid for the date/time in this time * zone, but if it's not valid then the time zone will be used as a * fallback to calculate the instant. * - `'ignore'` will disregard any provided offset. Instead, the time zone * and date/time value are used to calculate the instant. This will keep * local clock time unchanged but may result in a different real-world * instant. * - `'reject'` acts like `'prefer'`, except it will throw a RangeError if * the offset is not valid for the given time zone identifier and * date/time value. * * If the ISO string ends in 'Z' then this option is ignored because there * is no possibility of ambiguity. * * If a time zone offset is not present in the input, then this option is * ignored because the time zone will always be used to calculate the * offset. * * If the offset is not used, and if the date/time and time zone don't * uniquely identify a single instant, then the `disambiguation` option will * be used to choose the correct instant. However, if the offset is used * then the `disambiguation` option will be ignored. */ offset?: "use" | "prefer" | "ignore" | "reject"; }; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type ZonedDateTimeAssignmentOptions = Partial< AssignmentOptions & ToInstantOptions & OffsetDisambiguationOptions >; /** * Options for arithmetic operations like `add()` and `subtract()` * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type ArithmeticOptions = { /** * Controls handling of out-of-range arithmetic results. * * If a result is out of range, then `'constrain'` will clamp the result to * the allowed range, while `'reject'` will throw a RangeError. * * The default is `'constrain'`. */ overflow?: "constrain" | "reject"; }; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type DateUnit = "year" | "month" | "week" | "day"; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type TimeUnit = | "hour" | "minute" | "second" | "millisecond" | "microsecond" | "nanosecond"; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type DateTimeUnit = DateUnit | TimeUnit; /** * When the name of a unit is provided to a Temporal API as a string, it is * usually singular, e.g. 'day' or 'hour'. But plural unit names like 'days' * or 'hours' are also accepted. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type PluralUnit = { year: "years"; month: "months"; week: "weeks"; day: "days"; hour: "hours"; minute: "minutes"; second: "seconds"; millisecond: "milliseconds"; microsecond: "microseconds"; nanosecond: "nanoseconds"; }[T]; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type LargestUnit = "auto" | T | PluralUnit; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type SmallestUnit = T | PluralUnit; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type TotalUnit = T | PluralUnit; /** * Options for outputting precision in toString() on types with seconds * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type ToStringPrecisionOptions = { fractionalSecondDigits?: "auto" | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9; smallestUnit?: SmallestUnit< "minute" | "second" | "millisecond" | "microsecond" | "nanosecond" >; /** * Controls how rounding is performed: * - `halfExpand`: Round to the nearest of the values allowed by * `roundingIncrement` and `smallestUnit`. When there is a tie, round up. * This mode is the default. * - `ceil`: Always round up, towards the end of time. * - `trunc`: Always round down, towards the beginning of time. * - `floor`: Also round down, towards the beginning of time. This mode acts * the same as `trunc`, but it's included for consistency with * `Temporal.Duration.round()` where negative values are allowed and * `trunc` rounds towards zero, unlike `floor` which rounds towards * negative infinity which is usually unexpected. For this reason, `trunc` * is recommended for most use cases. */ roundingMode?: RoundingMode; }; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type ShowCalendarOption = { calendarName?: "auto" | "always" | "never" | "critical"; }; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type CalendarTypeToStringOptions = Partial< ToStringPrecisionOptions & ShowCalendarOption >; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type ZonedDateTimeToStringOptions = Partial< CalendarTypeToStringOptions & { timeZoneName?: "auto" | "never" | "critical"; offset?: "auto" | "never"; } >; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type InstantToStringOptions = Partial< ToStringPrecisionOptions & { timeZone: TimeZoneLike; } >; /** * Options to control the result of `until()` and `since()` methods in * `Temporal` types. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export interface DifferenceOptions { /** * The unit to round to. For example, to round to the nearest minute, use * `smallestUnit: 'minute'`. This property is optional for `until()` and * `since()`, because those methods default behavior is not to round. * However, the same property is required for `round()`. */ smallestUnit?: SmallestUnit; /** * The largest unit to allow in the resulting `Temporal.Duration` object. * * Larger units will be "balanced" into smaller units. For example, if * `largestUnit` is `'minute'` then a two-hour duration will be output as a * 120-minute duration. * * Valid values may include `'year'`, `'month'`, `'week'`, `'day'`, * `'hour'`, `'minute'`, `'second'`, `'millisecond'`, `'microsecond'`, * `'nanosecond'` and `'auto'`, although some types may throw an exception * if a value is used that would produce an invalid result. For example, * `hours` is not accepted by `Temporal.PlainDate.prototype.since()`. * * The default is always `'auto'`, though the meaning of this depends on the * type being used. */ largestUnit?: LargestUnit; /** * Allows rounding to an integer number of units. For example, to round to * increments of a half hour, use `{ smallestUnit: 'minute', * roundingIncrement: 30 }`. */ roundingIncrement?: number; /** * Controls how rounding is performed: * - `halfExpand`: Round to the nearest of the values allowed by * `roundingIncrement` and `smallestUnit`. When there is a tie, round away * from zero like `ceil` for positive durations and like `floor` for * negative durations. * - `ceil`: Always round up, towards the end of time. * - `trunc`: Always round down, towards the beginning of time. This mode is * the default. * - `floor`: Also round down, towards the beginning of time. This mode acts * the same as `trunc`, but it's included for consistency with * `Temporal.Duration.round()` where negative values are allowed and * `trunc` rounds towards zero, unlike `floor` which rounds towards * negative infinity which is usually unexpected. For this reason, `trunc` * is recommended for most use cases. */ roundingMode?: RoundingMode; } /** * `round` methods take one required parameter. If a string is provided, the * resulting `Temporal.Duration` object will be rounded to that unit. If an * object is provided, its `smallestUnit` property is required while other * properties are optional. A string is treated the same as an object whose * `smallestUnit` property value is that string. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type RoundTo = | SmallestUnit | { /** * The unit to round to. For example, to round to the nearest minute, * use `smallestUnit: 'minute'`. This option is required. Note that the * same-named property is optional when passed to `until` or `since` * methods, because those methods do no rounding by default. */ smallestUnit: SmallestUnit; /** * Allows rounding to an integer number of units. For example, to round to * increments of a half hour, use `{ smallestUnit: 'minute', * roundingIncrement: 30 }`. */ roundingIncrement?: number; /** * Controls how rounding is performed: * - `halfExpand`: Round to the nearest of the values allowed by * `roundingIncrement` and `smallestUnit`. When there is a tie, round up. * This mode is the default. * - `ceil`: Always round up, towards the end of time. * - `trunc`: Always round down, towards the beginning of time. * - `floor`: Also round down, towards the beginning of time. This mode acts * the same as `trunc`, but it's included for consistency with * `Temporal.Duration.round()` where negative values are allowed and * `trunc` rounds towards zero, unlike `floor` which rounds towards * negative infinity which is usually unexpected. For this reason, `trunc` * is recommended for most use cases. */ roundingMode?: RoundingMode; }; /** * The `round` method of the `Temporal.Duration` accepts one required * parameter. If a string is provided, the resulting `Temporal.Duration` * object will be rounded to that unit. If an object is provided, the * `smallestUnit` and/or `largestUnit` property is required, while other * properties are optional. A string parameter is treated the same as an * object whose `smallestUnit` property value is that string. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type DurationRoundTo = | SmallestUnit | ( & ( | { /** * The unit to round to. For example, to round to the nearest * minute, use `smallestUnit: 'minute'`. This property is normally * required, but is optional if `largestUnit` is provided and not * undefined. */ smallestUnit: SmallestUnit; /** * The largest unit to allow in the resulting `Temporal.Duration` * object. * * Larger units will be "balanced" into smaller units. For example, * if `largestUnit` is `'minute'` then a two-hour duration will be * output as a 120-minute duration. * * Valid values include `'year'`, `'month'`, `'week'`, `'day'`, * `'hour'`, `'minute'`, `'second'`, `'millisecond'`, * `'microsecond'`, `'nanosecond'` and `'auto'`. * * The default is `'auto'`, which means "the largest nonzero unit in * the input duration". This default prevents expanding durations to * larger units unless the caller opts into this behavior. * * If `smallestUnit` is larger, then `smallestUnit` will be used as * `largestUnit`, superseding a caller-supplied or default value. */ largestUnit?: LargestUnit; } | { /** * The unit to round to. For example, to round to the nearest * minute, use `smallestUnit: 'minute'`. This property is normally * required, but is optional if `largestUnit` is provided and not * undefined. */ smallestUnit?: SmallestUnit; /** * The largest unit to allow in the resulting `Temporal.Duration` * object. * * Larger units will be "balanced" into smaller units. For example, * if `largestUnit` is `'minute'` then a two-hour duration will be * output as a 120-minute duration. * * Valid values include `'year'`, `'month'`, `'week'`, `'day'`, * `'hour'`, `'minute'`, `'second'`, `'millisecond'`, * `'microsecond'`, `'nanosecond'` and `'auto'`. * * The default is `'auto'`, which means "the largest nonzero unit in * the input duration". This default prevents expanding durations to * larger units unless the caller opts into this behavior. * * If `smallestUnit` is larger, then `smallestUnit` will be used as * `largestUnit`, superseding a caller-supplied or default value. */ largestUnit: LargestUnit; } ) & { /** * Allows rounding to an integer number of units. For example, to round * to increments of a half hour, use `{ smallestUnit: 'minute', * roundingIncrement: 30 }`. */ roundingIncrement?: number; /** * Controls how rounding is performed: * - `halfExpand`: Round to the nearest of the values allowed by * `roundingIncrement` and `smallestUnit`. When there is a tie, round * away from zero like `ceil` for positive durations and like `floor` * for negative durations. This mode is the default. * - `ceil`: Always round towards positive infinity. For negative * durations this option will decrease the absolute value of the * duration which may be unexpected. To round away from zero, use * `ceil` for positive durations and `floor` for negative durations. * - `trunc`: Always round down towards zero. * - `floor`: Always round towards negative infinity. This mode acts the * same as `trunc` for positive durations but for negative durations * it will increase the absolute value of the result which may be * unexpected. For this reason, `trunc` is recommended for most "round * down" use cases. */ roundingMode?: RoundingMode; /** * The starting point to use for rounding and conversions when * variable-length units (years, months, weeks depending on the * calendar) are involved. This option is required if any of the * following are true: * - `unit` is `'week'` or larger units * - `this` has a nonzero value for `weeks` or larger units * * This value must be either a `Temporal.PlainDateTime`, a * `Temporal.ZonedDateTime`, or a string or object value that can be * passed to `from()` of those types. Examples: * - `'2020-01-01T00:00-08:00[America/Los_Angeles]'` * - `'2020-01-01'` * - `Temporal.PlainDate.from('2020-01-01')` * * `Temporal.ZonedDateTime` will be tried first because it's more * specific, with `Temporal.PlainDateTime` as a fallback. * * If the value resolves to a `Temporal.ZonedDateTime`, then operation * will adjust for DST and other time zone transitions. Otherwise * (including if this option is omitted), then the operation will ignore * time zone transitions and all days will be assumed to be 24 hours * long. */ relativeTo?: | Temporal.PlainDateTime | Temporal.ZonedDateTime | PlainDateTimeLike | ZonedDateTimeLike | string; } ); /** * Options to control behavior of `Duration.prototype.total()` * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type DurationTotalOf = | TotalUnit | { /** * The unit to convert the duration to. This option is required. */ unit: TotalUnit; /** * The starting point to use when variable-length units (years, months, * weeks depending on the calendar) are involved. This option is required if * any of the following are true: * - `unit` is `'week'` or larger units * - `this` has a nonzero value for `weeks` or larger units * * This value must be either a `Temporal.PlainDateTime`, a * `Temporal.ZonedDateTime`, or a string or object value that can be passed * to `from()` of those types. Examples: * - `'2020-01-01T00:00-08:00[America/Los_Angeles]'` * - `'2020-01-01'` * - `Temporal.PlainDate.from('2020-01-01')` * * `Temporal.ZonedDateTime` will be tried first because it's more * specific, with `Temporal.PlainDateTime` as a fallback. * * If the value resolves to a `Temporal.ZonedDateTime`, then operation will * adjust for DST and other time zone transitions. Otherwise (including if * this option is omitted), then the operation will ignore time zone * transitions and all days will be assumed to be 24 hours long. */ relativeTo?: | Temporal.ZonedDateTime | Temporal.PlainDateTime | ZonedDateTimeLike | PlainDateTimeLike | string; }; /** * Options to control behavior of `Duration.compare()` * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export interface DurationArithmeticOptions { /** * The starting point to use when variable-length units (years, months, * weeks depending on the calendar) are involved. This option is required if * either of the durations has a nonzero value for `weeks` or larger units. * * This value must be either a `Temporal.PlainDateTime`, a * `Temporal.ZonedDateTime`, or a string or object value that can be passed * to `from()` of those types. Examples: * - `'2020-01-01T00:00-08:00[America/Los_Angeles]'` * - `'2020-01-01'` * - `Temporal.PlainDate.from('2020-01-01')` * * `Temporal.ZonedDateTime` will be tried first because it's more * specific, with `Temporal.PlainDateTime` as a fallback. * * If the value resolves to a `Temporal.ZonedDateTime`, then operation will * adjust for DST and other time zone transitions. Otherwise (including if * this option is omitted), then the operation will ignore time zone * transitions and all days will be assumed to be 24 hours long. */ relativeTo?: | Temporal.ZonedDateTime | Temporal.PlainDateTime | ZonedDateTimeLike | PlainDateTimeLike | string; } /** * Options to control behaviour of `ZonedDateTime.prototype.getTimeZoneTransition()` * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type TransitionDirection = "next" | "previous" | { direction: "next" | "previous"; }; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type DurationLike = { years?: number; months?: number; weeks?: number; days?: number; hours?: number; minutes?: number; seconds?: number; milliseconds?: number; microseconds?: number; nanoseconds?: number; }; /** * A `Temporal.Duration` represents an immutable duration of time which can be * used in date/time arithmetic. * * See https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/duration.html for more details. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export class Duration { static from( item: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, ): Temporal.Duration; static compare( one: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, two: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, options?: DurationArithmeticOptions, ): ComparisonResult; constructor( years?: number, months?: number, weeks?: number, days?: number, hours?: number, minutes?: number, seconds?: number, milliseconds?: number, microseconds?: number, nanoseconds?: number, ); readonly sign: -1 | 0 | 1; readonly blank: boolean; readonly years: number; readonly months: number; readonly weeks: number; readonly days: number; readonly hours: number; readonly minutes: number; readonly seconds: number; readonly milliseconds: number; readonly microseconds: number; readonly nanoseconds: number; negated(): Temporal.Duration; abs(): Temporal.Duration; with(durationLike: DurationLike): Temporal.Duration; add( other: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, options?: DurationArithmeticOptions, ): Temporal.Duration; subtract( other: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, options?: DurationArithmeticOptions, ): Temporal.Duration; round(roundTo: DurationRoundTo): Temporal.Duration; total(totalOf: DurationTotalOf): number; toLocaleString( locales?: string | string[], options?: Intl.DateTimeFormatOptions, ): string; toJSON(): string; toString(options?: ToStringPrecisionOptions): string; valueOf(): never; readonly [Symbol.toStringTag]: "Temporal.Duration"; } /** * A `Temporal.Instant` is an exact point in time, with a precision in * nanoseconds. No time zone or calendar information is present. Therefore, * `Temporal.Instant` has no concept of days, months, or even hours. * * For convenience of interoperability, it internally uses nanoseconds since * the {@link https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_time|Unix epoch} (midnight * UTC on January 1, 1970). However, a `Temporal.Instant` can be created from * any of several expressions that refer to a single point in time, including * an {@link https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601|ISO 8601 string} with a * time zone offset such as '2020-01-23T17:04:36.491865121-08:00'. * * See https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/instant.html for more details. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export class Instant { static fromEpochMilliseconds(epochMilliseconds: number): Temporal.Instant; static fromEpochNanoseconds(epochNanoseconds: bigint): Temporal.Instant; static from(item: Temporal.Instant | string): Temporal.Instant; static compare( one: Temporal.Instant | string, two: Temporal.Instant | string, ): ComparisonResult; constructor(epochNanoseconds: bigint); readonly epochMilliseconds: number; readonly epochNanoseconds: bigint; equals(other: Temporal.Instant | string): boolean; add( durationLike: | Omit< Temporal.Duration | DurationLike, "years" | "months" | "weeks" | "days" > | string, ): Temporal.Instant; subtract( durationLike: | Omit< Temporal.Duration | DurationLike, "years" | "months" | "weeks" | "days" > | string, ): Temporal.Instant; until( other: Temporal.Instant | string, options?: DifferenceOptions< | "hour" | "minute" | "second" | "millisecond" | "microsecond" | "nanosecond" >, ): Temporal.Duration; since( other: Temporal.Instant | string, options?: DifferenceOptions< | "hour" | "minute" | "second" | "millisecond" | "microsecond" | "nanosecond" >, ): Temporal.Duration; round( roundTo: RoundTo< | "hour" | "minute" | "second" | "millisecond" | "microsecond" | "nanosecond" >, ): Temporal.Instant; toZonedDateTimeISO(tzLike: TimeZoneLike): Temporal.ZonedDateTime; toLocaleString( locales?: string | string[], options?: Intl.DateTimeFormatOptions, ): string; toJSON(): string; toString(options?: InstantToStringOptions): string; valueOf(): never; readonly [Symbol.toStringTag]: "Temporal.Instant"; } /** * Any of these types can be passed to Temporal methods instead of a calendar ID. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type CalendarLike = | string | ZonedDateTime | PlainDateTime | PlainDate | PlainYearMonth | PlainMonthDay; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type PlainDateLike = { era?: string | undefined; eraYear?: number | undefined; year?: number; month?: number; monthCode?: string; day?: number; calendar?: CalendarLike; }; /** * A `Temporal.PlainDate` represents a calendar date. "Calendar date" refers to the * concept of a date as expressed in everyday usage, independent of any time * zone. For example, it could be used to represent an event on a calendar * which happens during the whole day no matter which time zone it's happening * in. * * See https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/date.html for more details. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export class PlainDate { static from( item: Temporal.PlainDate | PlainDateLike | string, options?: AssignmentOptions, ): Temporal.PlainDate; static compare( one: Temporal.PlainDate | PlainDateLike | string, two: Temporal.PlainDate | PlainDateLike | string, ): ComparisonResult; constructor( isoYear: number, isoMonth: number, isoDay: number, calendar?: string, ); readonly era: string | undefined; readonly eraYear: number | undefined; readonly year: number; readonly month: number; readonly monthCode: string; readonly day: number; readonly calendarId: string; readonly dayOfWeek: number; readonly dayOfYear: number; readonly weekOfYear: number | undefined; readonly yearOfWeek: number | undefined; readonly daysInWeek: number; readonly daysInYear: number; readonly daysInMonth: number; readonly monthsInYear: number; readonly inLeapYear: boolean; equals(other: Temporal.PlainDate | PlainDateLike | string): boolean; with( dateLike: PlainDateLike, options?: AssignmentOptions, ): Temporal.PlainDate; withCalendar(calendar: CalendarLike): Temporal.PlainDate; add( durationLike: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, options?: ArithmeticOptions, ): Temporal.PlainDate; subtract( durationLike: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, options?: ArithmeticOptions, ): Temporal.PlainDate; until( other: Temporal.PlainDate | PlainDateLike | string, options?: DifferenceOptions<"year" | "month" | "week" | "day">, ): Temporal.Duration; since( other: Temporal.PlainDate | PlainDateLike | string, options?: DifferenceOptions<"year" | "month" | "week" | "day">, ): Temporal.Duration; toPlainDateTime( temporalTime?: Temporal.PlainTime | PlainTimeLike | string, ): Temporal.PlainDateTime; toZonedDateTime( timeZoneAndTime: | string | { timeZone: TimeZoneLike; plainTime?: Temporal.PlainTime | PlainTimeLike | string; }, ): Temporal.ZonedDateTime; toPlainYearMonth(): Temporal.PlainYearMonth; toPlainMonthDay(): Temporal.PlainMonthDay; toLocaleString( locales?: string | string[], options?: Intl.DateTimeFormatOptions, ): string; toJSON(): string; toString(options?: ShowCalendarOption): string; valueOf(): never; readonly [Symbol.toStringTag]: "Temporal.PlainDate"; } /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type PlainDateTimeLike = { era?: string | undefined; eraYear?: number | undefined; year?: number; month?: number; monthCode?: string; day?: number; hour?: number; minute?: number; second?: number; millisecond?: number; microsecond?: number; nanosecond?: number; calendar?: CalendarLike; }; /** * A `Temporal.PlainDateTime` represents a calendar date and wall-clock time, with * a precision in nanoseconds, and without any time zone. Of the Temporal * classes carrying human-readable time information, it is the most general * and complete one. `Temporal.PlainDate`, `Temporal.PlainTime`, `Temporal.PlainYearMonth`, * and `Temporal.PlainMonthDay` all carry less information and should be used when * complete information is not required. * * See https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/datetime.html for more details. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export class PlainDateTime { static from( item: Temporal.PlainDateTime | PlainDateTimeLike | string, options?: AssignmentOptions, ): Temporal.PlainDateTime; static compare( one: Temporal.PlainDateTime | PlainDateTimeLike | string, two: Temporal.PlainDateTime | PlainDateTimeLike | string, ): ComparisonResult; constructor( isoYear: number, isoMonth: number, isoDay: number, hour?: number, minute?: number, second?: number, millisecond?: number, microsecond?: number, nanosecond?: number, calendar?: string, ); readonly era: string | undefined; readonly eraYear: number | undefined; readonly year: number; readonly month: number; readonly monthCode: string; readonly day: number; readonly hour: number; readonly minute: number; readonly second: number; readonly millisecond: number; readonly microsecond: number; readonly nanosecond: number; readonly calendarId: string; readonly dayOfWeek: number; readonly dayOfYear: number; readonly weekOfYear: number | undefined; readonly yearOfWeek: number | undefined; readonly daysInWeek: number; readonly daysInYear: number; readonly daysInMonth: number; readonly monthsInYear: number; readonly inLeapYear: boolean; equals(other: Temporal.PlainDateTime | PlainDateTimeLike | string): boolean; with( dateTimeLike: PlainDateTimeLike, options?: AssignmentOptions, ): Temporal.PlainDateTime; withPlainTime( timeLike?: Temporal.PlainTime | PlainTimeLike | string, ): Temporal.PlainDateTime; withCalendar(calendar: CalendarLike): Temporal.PlainDateTime; add( durationLike: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, options?: ArithmeticOptions, ): Temporal.PlainDateTime; subtract( durationLike: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, options?: ArithmeticOptions, ): Temporal.PlainDateTime; until( other: Temporal.PlainDateTime | PlainDateTimeLike | string, options?: DifferenceOptions< | "year" | "month" | "week" | "day" | "hour" | "minute" | "second" | "millisecond" | "microsecond" | "nanosecond" >, ): Temporal.Duration; since( other: Temporal.PlainDateTime | PlainDateTimeLike | string, options?: DifferenceOptions< | "year" | "month" | "week" | "day" | "hour" | "minute" | "second" | "millisecond" | "microsecond" | "nanosecond" >, ): Temporal.Duration; round( roundTo: RoundTo< | "day" | "hour" | "minute" | "second" | "millisecond" | "microsecond" | "nanosecond" >, ): Temporal.PlainDateTime; toZonedDateTime( tzLike: TimeZoneLike, options?: ToInstantOptions, ): Temporal.ZonedDateTime; toPlainDate(): Temporal.PlainDate; toPlainTime(): Temporal.PlainTime; toLocaleString( locales?: string | string[], options?: Intl.DateTimeFormatOptions, ): string; toJSON(): string; toString(options?: CalendarTypeToStringOptions): string; valueOf(): never; readonly [Symbol.toStringTag]: "Temporal.PlainDateTime"; } /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type PlainMonthDayLike = { era?: string | undefined; eraYear?: number | undefined; year?: number; month?: number; monthCode?: string; day?: number; calendar?: CalendarLike; }; /** * A `Temporal.PlainMonthDay` represents a particular day on the calendar, but * without a year. For example, it could be used to represent a yearly * recurring event, like "Bastille Day is on the 14th of July." * * See https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/monthday.html for more details. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export class PlainMonthDay { static from( item: Temporal.PlainMonthDay | PlainMonthDayLike | string, options?: AssignmentOptions, ): Temporal.PlainMonthDay; constructor( isoMonth: number, isoDay: number, calendar?: string, referenceISOYear?: number, ); readonly monthCode: string; readonly day: number; readonly calendarId: string; equals(other: Temporal.PlainMonthDay | PlainMonthDayLike | string): boolean; with( monthDayLike: PlainMonthDayLike, options?: AssignmentOptions, ): Temporal.PlainMonthDay; toPlainDate(year: { year: number }): Temporal.PlainDate; toLocaleString( locales?: string | string[], options?: Intl.DateTimeFormatOptions, ): string; toJSON(): string; toString(options?: ShowCalendarOption): string; valueOf(): never; readonly [Symbol.toStringTag]: "Temporal.PlainMonthDay"; } /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type PlainTimeLike = { hour?: number; minute?: number; second?: number; millisecond?: number; microsecond?: number; nanosecond?: number; }; /** * A `Temporal.PlainTime` represents a wall-clock time, with a precision in * nanoseconds, and without any time zone. "Wall-clock time" refers to the * concept of a time as expressed in everyday usage — the time that you read * off the clock on the wall. For example, it could be used to represent an * event that happens daily at a certain time, no matter what time zone. * * `Temporal.PlainTime` refers to a time with no associated calendar date; if you * need to refer to a specific time on a specific day, use * `Temporal.PlainDateTime`. A `Temporal.PlainTime` can be converted into a * `Temporal.PlainDateTime` by combining it with a `Temporal.PlainDate` using the * `toPlainDateTime()` method. * * See https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/time.html for more details. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export class PlainTime { static from( item: Temporal.PlainTime | PlainTimeLike | string, options?: AssignmentOptions, ): Temporal.PlainTime; static compare( one: Temporal.PlainTime | PlainTimeLike | string, two: Temporal.PlainTime | PlainTimeLike | string, ): ComparisonResult; constructor( hour?: number, minute?: number, second?: number, millisecond?: number, microsecond?: number, nanosecond?: number, ); readonly hour: number; readonly minute: number; readonly second: number; readonly millisecond: number; readonly microsecond: number; readonly nanosecond: number; equals(other: Temporal.PlainTime | PlainTimeLike | string): boolean; with( timeLike: Temporal.PlainTime | PlainTimeLike, options?: AssignmentOptions, ): Temporal.PlainTime; add( durationLike: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, options?: ArithmeticOptions, ): Temporal.PlainTime; subtract( durationLike: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, options?: ArithmeticOptions, ): Temporal.PlainTime; until( other: Temporal.PlainTime | PlainTimeLike | string, options?: DifferenceOptions< | "hour" | "minute" | "second" | "millisecond" | "microsecond" | "nanosecond" >, ): Temporal.Duration; since( other: Temporal.PlainTime | PlainTimeLike | string, options?: DifferenceOptions< | "hour" | "minute" | "second" | "millisecond" | "microsecond" | "nanosecond" >, ): Temporal.Duration; round( roundTo: RoundTo< | "hour" | "minute" | "second" | "millisecond" | "microsecond" | "nanosecond" >, ): Temporal.PlainTime; toLocaleString( locales?: string | string[], options?: Intl.DateTimeFormatOptions, ): string; toJSON(): string; toString(options?: ToStringPrecisionOptions): string; valueOf(): never; readonly [Symbol.toStringTag]: "Temporal.PlainTime"; } /** * Any of these types can be passed to Temporal methods instead of a time zone ID. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type TimeZoneLike = string | ZonedDateTime; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type PlainYearMonthLike = { era?: string | undefined; eraYear?: number | undefined; year?: number; month?: number; monthCode?: string; calendar?: CalendarLike; }; /** * A `Temporal.PlainYearMonth` represents a particular month on the calendar. For * example, it could be used to represent a particular instance of a monthly * recurring event, like "the June 2019 meeting". * * See https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/yearmonth.html for more details. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export class PlainYearMonth { static from( item: Temporal.PlainYearMonth | PlainYearMonthLike | string, options?: AssignmentOptions, ): Temporal.PlainYearMonth; static compare( one: Temporal.PlainYearMonth | PlainYearMonthLike | string, two: Temporal.PlainYearMonth | PlainYearMonthLike | string, ): ComparisonResult; constructor( isoYear: number, isoMonth: number, calendar?: string, referenceISODay?: number, ); readonly era: string | undefined; readonly eraYear: number | undefined; readonly year: number; readonly month: number; readonly monthCode: string; readonly calendarId: string; readonly daysInMonth: number; readonly daysInYear: number; readonly monthsInYear: number; readonly inLeapYear: boolean; equals( other: Temporal.PlainYearMonth | PlainYearMonthLike | string, ): boolean; with( yearMonthLike: PlainYearMonthLike, options?: AssignmentOptions, ): Temporal.PlainYearMonth; add( durationLike: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, options?: ArithmeticOptions, ): Temporal.PlainYearMonth; subtract( durationLike: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, options?: ArithmeticOptions, ): Temporal.PlainYearMonth; until( other: Temporal.PlainYearMonth | PlainYearMonthLike | string, options?: DifferenceOptions<"year" | "month">, ): Temporal.Duration; since( other: Temporal.PlainYearMonth | PlainYearMonthLike | string, options?: DifferenceOptions<"year" | "month">, ): Temporal.Duration; toPlainDate(day: { day: number }): Temporal.PlainDate; toLocaleString( locales?: string | string[], options?: Intl.DateTimeFormatOptions, ): string; toJSON(): string; toString(options?: ShowCalendarOption): string; valueOf(): never; readonly [Symbol.toStringTag]: "Temporal.PlainYearMonth"; } /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export type ZonedDateTimeLike = { era?: string | undefined; eraYear?: number | undefined; year?: number; month?: number; monthCode?: string; day?: number; hour?: number; minute?: number; second?: number; millisecond?: number; microsecond?: number; nanosecond?: number; offset?: string; timeZone?: TimeZoneLike; calendar?: CalendarLike; }; /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export class ZonedDateTime { static from( item: Temporal.ZonedDateTime | ZonedDateTimeLike | string, options?: ZonedDateTimeAssignmentOptions, ): ZonedDateTime; static compare( one: Temporal.ZonedDateTime | ZonedDateTimeLike | string, two: Temporal.ZonedDateTime | ZonedDateTimeLike | string, ): ComparisonResult; constructor(epochNanoseconds: bigint, timeZone: string, calendar?: string); readonly era: string | undefined; readonly eraYear: number | undefined; readonly year: number; readonly month: number; readonly monthCode: string; readonly day: number; readonly hour: number; readonly minute: number; readonly second: number; readonly millisecond: number; readonly microsecond: number; readonly nanosecond: number; readonly timeZoneId: string; readonly calendarId: string; readonly dayOfWeek: number; readonly dayOfYear: number; readonly weekOfYear: number | undefined; readonly yearOfWeek: number | undefined; readonly hoursInDay: number; readonly daysInWeek: number; readonly daysInMonth: number; readonly daysInYear: number; readonly monthsInYear: number; readonly inLeapYear: boolean; readonly offsetNanoseconds: number; readonly offset: string; readonly epochMilliseconds: number; readonly epochNanoseconds: bigint; equals(other: Temporal.ZonedDateTime | ZonedDateTimeLike | string): boolean; with( zonedDateTimeLike: ZonedDateTimeLike, options?: ZonedDateTimeAssignmentOptions, ): Temporal.ZonedDateTime; withPlainTime( timeLike?: Temporal.PlainTime | PlainTimeLike | string, ): Temporal.ZonedDateTime; withCalendar(calendar: CalendarLike): Temporal.ZonedDateTime; withTimeZone(timeZone: TimeZoneLike): Temporal.ZonedDateTime; add( durationLike: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, options?: ArithmeticOptions, ): Temporal.ZonedDateTime; subtract( durationLike: Temporal.Duration | DurationLike | string, options?: ArithmeticOptions, ): Temporal.ZonedDateTime; until( other: Temporal.ZonedDateTime | ZonedDateTimeLike | string, options?: Temporal.DifferenceOptions< | "year" | "month" | "week" | "day" | "hour" | "minute" | "second" | "millisecond" | "microsecond" | "nanosecond" >, ): Temporal.Duration; since( other: Temporal.ZonedDateTime | ZonedDateTimeLike | string, options?: Temporal.DifferenceOptions< | "year" | "month" | "week" | "day" | "hour" | "minute" | "second" | "millisecond" | "microsecond" | "nanosecond" >, ): Temporal.Duration; round( roundTo: RoundTo< | "day" | "hour" | "minute" | "second" | "millisecond" | "microsecond" | "nanosecond" >, ): Temporal.ZonedDateTime; startOfDay(): Temporal.ZonedDateTime; getTimeZoneTransition( direction: TransitionDirection, ): Temporal.ZonedDateTime | null; toInstant(): Temporal.Instant; toPlainDateTime(): Temporal.PlainDateTime; toPlainDate(): Temporal.PlainDate; toPlainTime(): Temporal.PlainTime; toLocaleString( locales?: string | string[], options?: Intl.DateTimeFormatOptions, ): string; toJSON(): string; toString(options?: ZonedDateTimeToStringOptions): string; valueOf(): never; readonly [Symbol.toStringTag]: "Temporal.ZonedDateTime"; } /** * The `Temporal.Now` object has several methods which give information about * the current date, time, and time zone. * * See https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/now.html for more details. * * @category Temporal * @experimental */ export const Now: { /** * Get the exact system date and time as a `Temporal.Instant`. * * This method gets the current exact system time, without regard to * calendar or time zone. This is a good way to get a timestamp for an * event, for example. It works like the old-style JavaScript `Date.now()`, * but with nanosecond precision instead of milliseconds. * * Note that a `Temporal.Instant` doesn't know about time zones. For the * exact time in a specific time zone, use `Temporal.Now.zonedDateTimeISO` * or `Temporal.Now.zonedDateTime`. */ instant: () => Temporal.Instant; /** * Get the current calendar date and clock time in a specific time zone, * using the ISO 8601 calendar. * * @param {TimeZoneLike} [tzLike] - * {@link https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones|IANA time zone identifier} * string (e.g. `'Europe/London'`). If omitted, the environment's * current time zone will be used. */ zonedDateTimeISO: (tzLike?: TimeZoneLike) => Temporal.ZonedDateTime; /** * Get the current date and clock time in a specific time zone, using the * ISO 8601 calendar. * * Note that the `Temporal.PlainDateTime` type does not persist the time zone, * but retaining the time zone is required for most time-zone-related use * cases. Therefore, it's usually recommended to use * `Temporal.Now.zonedDateTimeISO` instead of this function. * * @param {TimeZoneLike} [tzLike] - * {@link https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones|IANA time zone identifier} * string (e.g. `'Europe/London'`). If omitted, the environment's * current time zone will be used. */ plainDateTimeISO: (tzLike?: TimeZoneLike) => Temporal.PlainDateTime; /** * Get the current date in a specific time zone, using the ISO 8601 * calendar. * * @param {TimeZoneLike} [tzLike] - * {@link https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones|IANA time zone identifier} * string (e.g. `'Europe/London'`). If omitted, the environment's * current time zone will be used. */ plainDateISO: (tzLike?: TimeZoneLike) => Temporal.PlainDate; /** * Get the current clock time in a specific time zone, using the ISO 8601 calendar. * * @param {TimeZoneLike} [tzLike] - * {@link https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones|IANA time zone identifier} * string (e.g. `'Europe/London'`). If omitted, the environment's * current time zone will be used. */ plainTimeISO: (tzLike?: TimeZoneLike) => Temporal.PlainTime; /** * Get the identifier of the environment's current time zone. * * This method gets the identifier of the current system time zone. This * will usually be a named * {@link https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones|IANA time zone}. */ timeZoneId: () => string; readonly [Symbol.toStringTag]: "Temporal.Now"; }; } /** * @category Temporal * @experimental */ declare interface Date { toTemporalInstant(): Temporal.Instant; } /** * @category Intl * @experimental */ declare namespace Intl { /** * @category Intl * @experimental */ export type Formattable = | Date | Temporal.Instant | Temporal.ZonedDateTime | Temporal.PlainDate | Temporal.PlainTime | Temporal.PlainDateTime | Temporal.PlainYearMonth | Temporal.PlainMonthDay; /** * @category Intl * @experimental */ export interface DateTimeFormatRangePart { source: "shared" | "startRange" | "endRange"; } /** * @category Intl * @experimental */ export interface DateTimeFormat { /** * Format a date into a string according to the locale and formatting * options of this `Intl.DateTimeFormat` object. * * @param date The date to format. */ format(date?: Formattable | number): string; /** * Allow locale-aware formatting of strings produced by * `Intl.DateTimeFormat` formatters. * * @param date The date to format. */ formatToParts( date?: Formattable | number, ): globalThis.Intl.DateTimeFormatPart[]; /** * Format a date range in the most concise way based on the locale and * options provided when instantiating this `Intl.DateTimeFormat` object. * * @param startDate The start date of the range to format. * @param endDate The start date of the range to format. Must be the same * type as `startRange`. */ formatRange(startDate: T, endDate: T): string; formatRange(startDate: Date | number, endDate: Date | number): string; /** * Allow locale-aware formatting of tokens representing each part of the * formatted date range produced by `Intl.DateTimeFormat` formatters. * * @param startDate The start date of the range to format. * @param endDate The start date of the range to format. Must be the same * type as `startRange`. */ formatRangeToParts( startDate: T, endDate: T, ): DateTimeFormatRangePart[]; formatRangeToParts( startDate: Date | number, endDate: Date | number, ): DateTimeFormatRangePart[]; } /** * @category Intl * @experimental */ export interface DateTimeFormatOptions { // TODO: remove the props below after TS lib declarations are updated dayPeriod?: "narrow" | "short" | "long"; dateStyle?: "full" | "long" | "medium" | "short"; timeStyle?: "full" | "long" | "medium" | "short"; } } /** * A typed array of 16-bit float values. The contents are initialized to 0. If the requested number * of bytes could not be allocated an exception is raised. * * @category Platform * @experimental */ declare interface Float16Array { /** * The size in bytes of each element in the array. */ readonly BYTES_PER_ELEMENT: number; /** * The ArrayBuffer instance referenced by the array. */ readonly buffer: ArrayBufferLike; /** * The length in bytes of the array. */ readonly byteLength: number; /** * The offset in bytes of the array. */ readonly byteOffset: number; /** * Returns the this object after copying a section of the array identified by start and end * to the same array starting at position target * @param target If target is negative, it is treated as length+target where length is the * length of the array. * @param start If start is negative, it is treated as length+start. If end is negative, it * is treated as length+end. * @param end If not specified, length of the this object is used as its default value. */ copyWithin(target: number, start: number, end?: number): this; /** * Determines whether all the members of an array satisfy the specified test. * @param predicate A function that accepts up to three arguments. The every method calls * the predicate function for each element in the array until the predicate returns a value * which is coercible to the Boolean value false, or until the end of the array. * @param thisArg An object to which the this keyword can refer in the predicate function. * If thisArg is omitted, undefined is used as the this value. */ every( predicate: (value: number, index: number, array: Float16Array) => unknown, thisArg?: any, ): boolean; /** * Changes all array elements from `start` to `end` index to a static `value` and returns the modified array * @param value value to fill array section with * @param start index to start filling the array at. If start is negative, it is treated as * length+start where length is the length of the array. * @param end index to stop filling the array at. If end is negative, it is treated as * length+end. */ fill(value: number, start?: number, end?: number): this; /** * Returns the elements of an array that meet the condition specified in a callback function. * @param predicate A function that accepts up to three arguments. The filter method calls * the predicate function one time for each element in the array. * @param thisArg An object to which the this keyword can refer in the predicate function. * If thisArg is omitted, undefined is used as the this value. */ filter( predicate: (value: number, index: number, array: Float16Array) => any, thisArg?: any, ): Float16Array; /** * Returns the value of the first element in the array where predicate is true, and undefined * otherwise. * @param predicate find calls predicate once for each element of the array, in ascending * order, until it finds one where predicate returns true. If such an element is found, find * immediately returns that element value. Otherwise, find returns undefined. * @param thisArg If provided, it will be used as the this value for each invocation of * predicate. If it is not provided, undefined is used instead. */ find( predicate: (value: number, index: number, obj: Float16Array) => boolean, thisArg?: any, ): number | undefined; /** * Returns the index of the first element in the array where predicate is true, and -1 * otherwise. * @param predicate find calls predicate once for each element of the array, in ascending * order, until it finds one where predicate returns true. If such an element is found, * findIndex immediately returns that element index. Otherwise, findIndex returns -1. * @param thisArg If provided, it will be used as the this value for each invocation of * predicate. If it is not provided, undefined is used instead. */ findIndex( predicate: (value: number, index: number, obj: Float16Array) => boolean, thisArg?: any, ): number; /** * Performs the specified action for each element in an array. * @param callbackfn A function that accepts up to three arguments. forEach calls the * callbackfn function one time for each element in the array. * @param thisArg An object to which the this keyword can refer in the callbackfn function. * If thisArg is omitted, undefined is used as the this value. */ forEach( callbackfn: (value: number, index: number, array: Float16Array) => void, thisArg?: any, ): void; /** * Returns the index of the first occurrence of a value in an array. * @param searchElement The value to locate in the array. * @param fromIndex The array index at which to begin the search. If fromIndex is omitted, the * search starts at index 0. */ indexOf(searchElement: number, fromIndex?: number): number; /** * Adds all the elements of an array separated by the specified separator string. * @param separator A string used to separate one element of an array from the next in the * resulting String. If omitted, the array elements are separated with a comma. */ join(separator?: string): string; /** * Returns the index of the last occurrence of a value in an array. * @param searchElement The value to locate in the array. * @param fromIndex The array index at which to begin the search. If fromIndex is omitted, the * search starts at index 0. */ lastIndexOf(searchElement: number, fromIndex?: number): number; /** * The length of the array. */ readonly length: number; /** * Calls a defined callback function on each element of an array, and returns an array that * contains the results. * @param callbackfn A function that accepts up to three arguments. The map method calls the * callbackfn function one time for each element in the array. * @param thisArg An object to which the this keyword can refer in the callbackfn function. * If thisArg is omitted, undefined is used as the this value. */ map( callbackfn: (value: number, index: number, array: Float16Array) => number, thisArg?: any, ): Float16Array; /** * Calls the specified callback function for all the elements in an array. The return value of * the callback function is the accumulated result, and is provided as an argument in the next * call to the callback function. * @param callbackfn A function that accepts up to four arguments. The reduce method calls the * callbackfn function one time for each element in the array. * @param initialValue If initialValue is specified, it is used as the initial value to start * the accumulation. The first call to the callbackfn function provides this value as an argument * instead of an array value. */ reduce( callbackfn: ( previousValue: number, currentValue: number, currentIndex: number, array: Float16Array, ) => number, ): number; reduce( callbackfn: ( previousValue: number, currentValue: number, currentIndex: number, array: Float16Array, ) => number, initialValue: number, ): number; /** * Calls the specified callback function for all the elements in an array. The return value of * the callback function is the accumulated result, and is provided as an argument in the next * call to the callback function. * @param callbackfn A function that accepts up to four arguments. The reduce method calls the * callbackfn function one time for each element in the array. * @param initialValue If initialValue is specified, it is used as the initial value to start * the accumulation. The first call to the callbackfn function provides this value as an argument * instead of an array value. */ reduce( callbackfn: ( previousValue: U, currentValue: number, currentIndex: number, array: Float16Array, ) => U, initialValue: U, ): U; /** * Calls the specified callback function for all the elements in an array, in descending order. * The return value of the callback function is the accumulated result, and is provided as an * argument in the next call to the callback function. * @param callbackfn A function that accepts up to four arguments. The reduceRight method calls * the callbackfn function one time for each element in the array. * @param initialValue If initialValue is specified, it is used as the initial value to start * the accumulation. The first call to the callbackfn function provides this value as an * argument instead of an array value. */ reduceRight( callbackfn: ( previousValue: number, currentValue: number, currentIndex: number, array: Float16Array, ) => number, ): number; reduceRight( callbackfn: ( previousValue: number, currentValue: number, currentIndex: number, array: Float16Array, ) => number, initialValue: number, ): number; /** * Calls the specified callback function for all the elements in an array, in descending order. * The return value of the callback function is the accumulated result, and is provided as an * argument in the next call to the callback function. * @param callbackfn A function that accepts up to four arguments. The reduceRight method calls * the callbackfn function one time for each element in the array. * @param initialValue If initialValue is specified, it is used as the initial value to start * the accumulation. The first call to the callbackfn function provides this value as an argument * instead of an array value. */ reduceRight( callbackfn: ( previousValue: U, currentValue: number, currentIndex: number, array: Float16Array, ) => U, initialValue: U, ): U; /** * Reverses the elements in an Array. */ reverse(): Float16Array; /** * Sets a value or an array of values. * @param array A typed or untyped array of values to set. * @param offset The index in the current array at which the values are to be written. */ set(array: ArrayLike, offset?: number): void; /** * Returns a section of an array. * @param start The beginning of the specified portion of the array. * @param end The end of the specified portion of the array. This is exclusive of the element at the index 'end'. */ slice(start?: number, end?: number): Float16Array; /** * Determines whether the specified callback function returns true for any element of an array. * @param predicate A function that accepts up to three arguments. The some method calls * the predicate function for each element in the array until the predicate returns a value * which is coercible to the Boolean value true, or until the end of the array. * @param thisArg An object to which the this keyword can refer in the predicate function. * If thisArg is omitted, undefined is used as the this value. */ some( predicate: (value: number, index: number, array: Float16Array) => unknown, thisArg?: any, ): boolean; /** * Sorts an array. * @param compareFn Function used to determine the order of the elements. It is expected to return * a negative value if first argument is less than second argument, zero if they're equal and a positive * value otherwise. If omitted, the elements are sorted in ascending order. * ```ts * [11,2,22,1].sort((a, b) => a - b) * ``` */ sort(compareFn?: (a: number, b: number) => number): this; /** * Gets a new Float16Array view of the ArrayBuffer store for this array, referencing the elements * at begin, inclusive, up to end, exclusive. * @param begin The index of the beginning of the array. * @param end The index of the end of the array. */ subarray(begin?: number, end?: number): Float16Array; /** * Converts a number to a string by using the current locale. */ toLocaleString(): string; /** * Returns a string representation of an array. */ toString(): string; /** Returns the primitive value of the specified object. */ valueOf(): Float16Array; [index: number]: number; } /** * @category Platform * @experimental */ declare interface Float16ArrayConstructor { readonly prototype: Float16Array; new (length: number): Float16Array; new (array: ArrayLike | ArrayBufferLike): Float16Array; new ( buffer: ArrayBufferLike, byteOffset?: number, length?: number, ): Float16Array; /** * The size in bytes of each element in the array. */ readonly BYTES_PER_ELEMENT: number; /** * Returns a new array from a set of elements. * @param items A set of elements to include in the new array object. */ of(...items: number[]): Float16Array; /** * Creates an array from an array-like or iterable object. * @param arrayLike An array-like or iterable object to convert to an array. */ from(arrayLike: ArrayLike): Float16Array; /** * Creates an array from an array-like or iterable object. * @param arrayLike An array-like or iterable object to convert to an array. * @param mapfn A mapping function to call on every element of the array. * @param thisArg Value of 'this' used to invoke the mapfn. */ from( arrayLike: ArrayLike, mapfn: (v: T, k: number) => number, thisArg?: any, ): Float16Array; } /** * @category Platform * @experimental */ declare var Float16Array: Float16ArrayConstructor; /** * @category Platform * @experimental */ declare interface Float16Array { [Symbol.iterator](): IterableIterator; /** * Returns an array of key, value pairs for every entry in the array */ entries(): IterableIterator<[number, number]>; /** * Returns an list of keys in the array */ keys(): IterableIterator; /** * Returns an list of values in the array */ values(): IterableIterator; } /** * @category Platform * @experimental */ declare interface Float16Constructor { new (elements: Iterable): Float16Array; /** * Creates an array from an array-like or iterable object. * @param arrayLike An array-like or iterable object to convert to an array. * @param mapfn A mapping function to call on every element of the array. * @param thisArg Value of 'this' used to invoke the mapfn. */ from( arrayLike: Iterable, mapfn?: (v: number, k: number) => number, thisArg?: any, ): Float16Array; } /** * @category Platform * @experimental */ declare interface Float16Array { readonly [Symbol.toStringTag]: "Float16Array"; } /** * @category Platform * @experimental */ declare interface Float16Array { /** * Determines whether an array includes a certain element, returning true or false as appropriate. * @param searchElement The element to search for. * @param fromIndex The position in this array at which to begin searching for searchElement. */ includes(searchElement: number, fromIndex?: number): boolean; } /** * @category Platform * @experimental */ declare interface Float16ArrayConstructor { new (): Float16Array; } /** * @category Platform * @experimental */ declare interface Float16Array { /** * Returns the item located at the specified index. * @param index The zero-based index of the desired code unit. A negative index will count back from the last item. */ at(index: number): number | undefined; } /** * @category Platform * @experimental */ declare interface Float16Array { /** * Returns the value of the last element in the array where predicate is true, and undefined * otherwise. * @param predicate findLast calls predicate once for each element of the array, in descending * order, until it finds one where predicate returns true. If such an element is found, findLast * immediately returns that element value. Otherwise, findLast returns undefined. * @param thisArg If provided, it will be used as the this value for each invocation of * predicate. If it is not provided, undefined is used instead. */ findLast( predicate: ( value: number, index: number, array: Float16Array, ) => value is S, thisArg?: any, ): S | undefined; findLast( predicate: ( value: number, index: number, array: Float16Array, ) => unknown, thisArg?: any, ): number | undefined; /** * Returns the index of the last element in the array where predicate is true, and -1 * otherwise. * @param predicate findLastIndex calls predicate once for each element of the array, in descending * order, until it finds one where predicate returns true. If such an element is found, * findLastIndex immediately returns that element index. Otherwise, findLastIndex returns -1. * @param thisArg If provided, it will be used as the this value for each invocation of * predicate. If it is not provided, undefined is used instead. */ findLastIndex( predicate: ( value: number, index: number, array: Float16Array, ) => unknown, thisArg?: any, ): number; /** * Copies the array and returns the copy with the elements in reverse order. */ toReversed(): Float16Array; /** * Copies and sorts the array. * @param compareFn Function used to determine the order of the elements. It is expected to return * a negative value if the first argument is less than the second argument, zero if they're equal, and a positive * value otherwise. If omitted, the elements are sorted in ascending order. * ```ts * const myNums = Float16Array.from([11.25, 2, -22.5, 1]); * myNums.toSorted((a, b) => a - b) // Float16Array(4) [-22.5, 1, 2, 11.5] * ``` */ toSorted(compareFn?: (a: number, b: number) => number): Float16Array; /** * Copies the array and inserts the given number at the provided index. * @param index The index of the value to overwrite. If the index is * negative, then it replaces from the end of the array. * @param value The value to insert into the copied array. * @returns A copy of the original array with the inserted value. */ with(index: number, value: number): Float16Array; } /** * @category Platform * @experimental */ declare interface DataView { /** * Gets the Float16 value at the specified byte offset from the start of the view. There is * no alignment constraint; multi-byte values may be fetched from any offset. * @param byteOffset The place in the buffer at which the value should be retrieved. * @param littleEndian If false or undefined, a big-endian value should be read. */ getFloat16(byteOffset: number, littleEndian?: boolean): number; /** * Stores an Float16 value at the specified byte offset from the start of the view. * @param byteOffset The place in the buffer at which the value should be set. * @param value The value to set. * @param littleEndian If false or undefined, a big-endian value should be written. */ setFloat16(byteOffset: number, value: number, littleEndian?: boolean): void; }