@badrap/valita
A TypeScript library for validating & parsing structured objects. The API is heavily influenced by Zod's excellent API, while the implementation side aims for the impressive performance of simple-runtypes.
We also pay special attention for providing descriptive validation error messages:
const vehicle = v.union(
v.object({ type: v.literal("plane"), airline: v.string() }),
v.object({ type: v.literal("train") }),
v.object({ type: v.literal("automobile"), make: v.string() })
);
vehicle.parse({ type: "bike" });
Installation
npm i @badrap/valita
Docs aren't my forté
A motivating example in lack of any better documentation:
import * as v from "@badrap/valita";
const Pet = v.object({
type: v.union(v.literal("dog"), v.literal("cat")),
name: v.string(),
});
const Person = v.object({
name: v.string(),
age: v.number(),
pets: v.array(Pet).optional(),
});
Now Person.parse(value)
returns value
if it matches the Person schema - or throws an error otherwise.
const grizzlor = Person.parse({
name: "Grizzlor",
age: 101,
pets: [
{ type: "cat", name: "Mittens" },
{ type: "cat", name: "Parsley" },
{ type: "cat", name: "Lulu" },
{ type: "cat", name: "Thomas Percival Meowther III" },
],
});
The real magic here comes from TypeScript's type inference. The inferred type for grizzlor
is:
const grizzlor: {
name: string;
age: number;
pets?: { type: "dog" | "cat"; name: string }[] | undefined;
};
You can use Infer<T>
to get your mitts on the inferred type in your code:
type PersonType = v.Infer<typeof Person>;
License
This library is licensed under the MIT license. See LICENSE.