Sway Enums are a little distinct from TypeScript Enums. In this document, we will explore how you can represent Sway Enums in the SDK and how to use them with Sway contract functions.
Consider the following basic Sway Enum called StateError
:
pub enum StateError {
Void: (),
Pending: (),
Completed: (),
}
The type ()
indicates that there is no additional data associated with each Enum variant. Sway allows you to create Enums of Enums or associate types with Enum variants.
Let's define a Sway contract function that takes a StateError
Enum variant as an argument and returns it:
fn echo_state_error_enum(state_error: StateError) -> StateError {
state_error
}
To execute the contract function and validate the response, we can use the following code:
import { Provider, Wallet } from 'fuels';
import { LOCAL_NETWORK_URL, WALLET_PVT_KEY } from '../../../../env';
import { EchoEnumFactory } from '../../../../typegend';
import { StateErrorInput } from '../../../../typegend/contracts/EchoEnum';
const provider = await Provider.create(LOCAL_NETWORK_URL);
const wallet = Wallet.fromPrivateKey(WALLET_PVT_KEY, provider);
const deploy = await EchoEnumFactory.deploy(wallet);
const { contract } = await deploy.waitForResult();
const enumParam = StateErrorInput.Completed;
const { value } = await contract.functions
.echo_state_error_enum(enumParam)
.get();
console.log('value', value);
// StateErrorInput.Completed
In this example, we simply pass the Enum variant as a value to execute the contract function call.
In this example, the Error
Enum is an Enum of two other Enums: StateError
and UserError
.
pub enum StateError {
Void: (),
Pending: (),
Completed: (),
}
pub enum UserError {
Unauthorized: (),
InsufficientPermissions: (),
}
pub enum Error {
StateError: StateError,
UserError: UserError,
}
Now, let's create a Sway contract function that accepts any variant of the Error
Enum as a parameter and returns it immediately. This variant could be from either the StateError
or UserError
Enums.
fn echo_error_enum(error: Error) -> Error {
error
}
Since the Error
Enum is an Enum of Enums, we need to pass the function parameter differently. The parameter will be a TypeScript object:
const enumParam = { UserError: UserErrorInput.InsufficientPermissions };
const { value } = await contract.functions.echo_error_enum(enumParam).get();
console.log('value', value);
// { UserError: UserErrorInput.InsufficientPermissions }
In this case, since the variant InsufficientPermissions
belongs to the UserError
Enum, we create a TypeScript object using the Enum name as the object key and the variant as the object value.
We would follow the same approach if we intended to use a variant from the StateError
Enum:
const enumParam = { StateError: StateErrorInput.Completed };
const { value } = await contract.functions.echo_error_enum(enumParam).get();
console.log('value', value);
// { StateError: StateErrorInput.Completed }
While working with enums, you may run into the following issues:
Thrown when the type being passed to the enum does not match that expected by it.
// Valid types: string
const emumParam = 1;
try {
// @ts-expect-error number is not a valid type
await contract.functions.echo_state_error_enum(emumParam).get();
} catch (error) {
console.log('error', error);
}
Thrown when the parameter passed is not an expected enum value.
// Valid values: 'Void', 'Pending', 'Completed'
const invalidEnumValue = 'NotStateEnumValue';
try {
// @ts-expect-error NotStateEnumValue is not a valid value
await contract.functions.echo_state_error_enum(invalidEnumValue).get();
} catch (error) {
console.log('error', error);
}
Thrown when the passed enum case is not an expected enum case value.
// Valid case keys: 'StateError', 'UserError'
const enumParam = { UnknownKey: 'Completed' };
try {
// @ts-expect-error UnknownKey is not a valid key
await contract.functions.echo_error_enum(enumParam).get();
} catch (error) {
console.log('error', error);
}