Rocky_Mountain_Vending/.pnpm-store/v10/files/e1/0ad03a9b126c7ba895a3597e4f16d720ef17c59b469e1c066e8d4b1643c5155d50b964f317dd668edd153c7d3c36eb99575952147508dff938a57fb48f8b3b
DMleadgen 46d973904b
Initial commit: Rocky Mountain Vending website
Next.js website for Rocky Mountain Vending company featuring:
- Product catalog with Stripe integration
- Service areas and parts pages
- Admin dashboard with Clerk authentication
- SEO optimized pages with JSON-LD structured data

Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>
2026-02-12 16:22:15 -07:00

32 lines
1.2 KiB
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import type {SetReturnType} from './set-return-type';
/**
Create an async version of the given function type, by boxing the return type in `Promise` while keeping the same parameter types.
Use-case: You have two functions, one synchronous and one asynchronous that do the same thing. Instead of having to duplicate the type definition, you can use `Asyncify` to reuse the synchronous type.
@example
```
import type {Asyncify} from 'type-fest';
// Synchronous function.
function getFooSync(someArg: SomeType): Foo {
// …
}
type AsyncifiedFooGetter = Asyncify<typeof getFooSync>;
//=> type AsyncifiedFooGetter = (someArg: SomeType) => Promise<Foo>;
// Same as `getFooSync` but asynchronous.
const getFooAsync: AsyncifiedFooGetter = (someArg) => {
// TypeScript now knows that `someArg` is `SomeType` automatically.
// It also knows that this function must return `Promise<Foo>`.
// If you have `@typescript-eslint/promise-function-async` linter rule enabled, it will even report that "Functions that return promises must be async.".
// …
}
```
@category Async
*/
export type Asyncify<Function_ extends (...arguments_: any[]) => any> = SetReturnType<Function_, Promise<Awaited<ReturnType<Function_>>>>;