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@briza/wegood
Advanced tools
Tiny validation library, so wegood with data.
Revision: April 13, 2020.
This project has been developed to provide a shared validation logic between front-end and back-end code, easily extend-able with custom rules.
The library is being build as CommonJS module and ESM.
Code documentation could be found here: https://briza-insurance.github.io/wegood/index.html.
npm install -D @briza/wegood
yarn add @briza/wegood -D
Table of Content
// Import the Validator.
import Validator from '@briza/wegood';
// Import some of the predefined validation rules.
import {
equal,
length,
pattern,
} from '@briza/wegood';
/**
* Create a new instances of the validator with given rules.
*/
const ratingValidator = new Validator([
present('The rating is required.'),
equal('The value must be 5.', 5)
]);
const idValidator = new Validator([
present('The ID is required.'),
length('The value must 9 characters long.', 9, 9),
pattern('The value must be in A000-0000 format, where 0 could be any number.', /^A\d{3}-\d{4}$/)
]);
/**
* Use one of the validation methods.
*/
// Return the validation result:
// { valid: boolean, errors: [] }
// Errors contains the error message of the first not-satisfied rule.
ratingValidator.validate(1);
// Return the validation result:
// { valid: boolean, errors: [] }
// Errors contains the error message of all not-satisfied rules.
idValidator.validate('a1234-4', false /* firstErrorOnly */);
// Return true if valid, false otherwise.
ratingValidator.valid(1);
// Return array of error messages of all not-satisfied rules.
idValidator.errors('a1234-4');
// Return array of error messages of all not-satisfied rules.
idValidator.errors('a1234-4');
// Return only the first error message of the not-satisfied rule, still returned as an array.
idValidator.errors('a1234-4', true /* firstErrorOnly */);
// Import the Validator.
import Validator from '@briza/wegood';
import { present } from '@briza/wegood';
// Create the validator.
const validator = new Validator([present('this field is required.')]);
There is collection of functions to provide implementation agnostic approach:
Get the validator rules.
validator.rules
// validation rules (function[])
Validate against the tested value, it returns the Validation Result.
The Validation Result is a object with these properties:
Property | Type | Note | Example |
---|---|---|---|
valid | boolean | Validity state. | true |
errors | string[] | Collection of captured validation errors. | ['this field is required'] |
Example
// Valid
{
valid: true,
errors: []
}
// Invalid
{
valid: false,
errors: ['invalid email format']
}
Passing false as the seconds parameter, returns collection of all validation errors, if any.
validator.validate(testedValue)
/**
* {
* valid: true|false,
* errors: []
* }
*
* The errors will contain only first discovered error.
*
*/
validator.validate(testedValue, false)
/**
* {
* valid: true|false,
* errors: []
* }
*
* The errors will contain all discovered error.
*
*/
Validity predicate against the tested value.
validator.valid(testedValue)
// true | false
Get the validation errors. if any.
Passing true as the seconds parameter, returns only the first validation error, if any.
validator.errors(testedValue)
// string[]
// All errors will be captured.
validator.errors(testedValue, true)
// string[]
// Only the first error will be captured.
All builtin validation rules have this construct:
function rule(errorMessage: string, agr1: any, ... argN: any): (value: any) => true|string
rule('error message')(testValue)
.Verify that the tested value is present, i.e. defined and not empty.
import { present } from '@briza/wegood';
Function Arguments
present(errorMessage)
Argument | Notes | Example |
---|---|---|
errorMessage | Error message. | 'the value must be 5' |
Example
// The value must have some value.
present('error message');
Verify that the tested value is equal to another.
import { equal } from '@briza/wegood';
Function Arguments
equal(errorMessage, value|customMatcher)
Argument | Notes | Example |
---|---|---|
errorMessage | Error message. | 'the value must be 5' |
value | The equal value. | 5 |
customMatcher | Custom equality predicate function. | (value) => value === 5 |
Example
// The value must be equal to 5.
equal('error message', 5);
// Custom matcher.
equal('error message', (value) => {
return value === 5;
});
Verify that the tested value is matches the pattern.
import { pattern } from '@briza/wegood';
Function Arguments
pattern(errorMessage, pattern)
Argument | Notes | Example |
---|---|---|
errorMessage | Error message. | 'invalid email format' |
pattern | Regular expression used to validate the value. | /^[^@]+@.*\.[a-z]{2, 5}$/ |
Example
// The value must match the given pattern.
pattern('error message', /^[^@]+@.*\.[a-z]{2, 5}$/);
Verify that the tested value is in the given range (inclusive).
import { range } from '@briza/wegood';
Function Arguments
range(errorMessage, min, max)
Argument | Notes | Example |
---|---|---|
errorMessage | Error message. | 'the value must be in range 3-10' |
min | Minimal boundary. If set to undefined or null , it is being ignored. | 3 |
max | Maximal boundary. If set to undefined or null , it is being ignored. | 10 |
Example
// The value must be between 3 and 10.
range('error message', 3, 10);
// The value must be 3 and above, aka MIN.
range('error message', 3);
// The value must be 10 and bellow, aka MAX.
range('error message', null|undefined, 10);
Verify that the tested value is in the given string length range (inclusive).
import { length } from '@briza/wegood';
Function Arguments
length(errorMessage, min, max)
Argument | Notes | Example |
---|---|---|
errorMessage | Error message. | 'the value must be 3-10 characters long' |
min | Minimal length. If set to undefined or null , it is being ignored. | 3 |
max | Maximal length. If set to undefined or null , it is being ignored. | 10 |
Example
// The value must be 3 up to 10 characters long.
length('error message', 3, 10);
// The value must be 3 and more characters long, aka MIN.
length('error message', 3);
// The value must be 10 and less characters long, aka MAX.
length('error message', null|undefined, 10);
Verify that the tested value is not the exclusion list.
import { exclude } from '@briza/wegood';
Function Arguments
exclude(errorMessage, exclusions)
Argument | Notes | Example |
---|---|---|
errorMessage | Error message. | 'invalid value' |
exclusions | Array of exclusions. | [1,2,3] |
Example
// The value must not be contained in the list.
exclude('error message', [1, 2, 3]);
// The value must not be contained in the list.
exclude('error message', ['circle', 'square', 'triable']);
Verify that the tested value is not the exclusion list.
import { include } from '@briza/wegood';
Function Arguments
include(errorMessage, inclusions)
Argument | Notes | Example |
---|---|---|
errorMessage | Error message. | 'invalid value' |
inclusions | Array of inclusions. | [1,2,3] |
Example
// The value must be contained in the list.
include('error message', [1, 2, 3]);
// The value must be contained in the list.
include('error message', ['circle', 'square', 'triable']);
Verify that the tested value is the date range.
import { date } from '@briza/wegood';
Function Arguments
date(errorMessage, start, end, transform)
Argument | Notes | Example |
---|---|---|
errorMessage | Error message. | 'the date in not in valid range.' |
start | Start date boundary: ISO date string (yyyy-mm-dd), Date object , or Relative Date Offset. If set to undefined or null , it is being ignored. | 2020-03-16 |
end | End date boundary: ISO date string (yyyy-mm-dd), Date object , or Relative Date Offset. If set to undefined or null , it is being ignored. | 3y |
transform | Custom Date object transformer function. Optional. | (value) => new Date(value) |
todayDate | Today's date to be used for relative date boundaries. Optional, if not provided the start of the day in current environment timezone will be used | new Date('2020-10-10T00:00:00+03:00) |
Instead of a concrete ISO date string or Date object below annotated shortcodes may be used to set the date boundary relative to TODAY date.
Annotation | Meaning | Example |
---|---|---|
0 | Today. | 0 |
-1 | In past. | -1 |
1 | In future. | 1 |
-Nd | N days in past, relative from today. | -10d |
Nd | N days in past, relative from today. | 10d |
-Nw | N weeks in past, relative from today. | -2w |
Nw | N weeks in past, relative from today. | 2w |
-Nm | N months in past, relative from today. | -6m |
Nm | N months in past, relative from today. | 6m |
-Ny | N years in past, relative from today. | -2y |
Ny | N years in past, relative from today. | 2y |
Example
/**
* The value (date) must between the given data range.
*/
// ISO strings
date('error message', '2000-12-30', '2020-06-29');
// Date objects
date('error message', new Date('2000-12-30T00:00:00+00:00'), new Date('2020-06-29T00:00:00+00:00'));
/**
* The value (date) must after the date.
*/
// ISO string
date('error message', '2000-12-30');
// Date object
date('error message', new Date('2000-12-30T00:00:00+00:00'))
/**
* The value (date) must before the date.
*/
// ISO string
date('error message', undefined|null, '2020-06-29');
// Date object
date('error message', undefined|null, new Date('2020-06-29T00:00:00+00:00'))
/**
* Relative offsets, relative to today.
*/
// Any date in past, until today.
date('error message', -1, 0);
// Any date in future, starts from today.
date('error message', 0, 1);
// Any date between 2 years ago, up to 3 months from today.
date('error message', '-2y', '3m');
// Combined fixed date with relative date.
// Any date from 2000-12-30 until today.
date('error message', '2000-12-30', 0);
// Passing today Date
date('error message', 1, '60d', undefined, new Date('2020-11-11T00:00:00+03:00'))
The tested value must be passed to the validation rule in the ISO date string
(yyyy-mm-dd) or as a Date object
, otherwise the validation rule throws an error. The transform function could be passed to the rule to handle custom conversion from mixed value into the Date object.
// Custom transform function
date('error message', '2000-12-30', '2020-06-29', (value) => new Date(value));
Verify that the tested value is in the year range.
import { year } from '@briza/wegood';
Function Arguments
year(errorMessage, start, end)
Argument | Notes | Example |
---|---|---|
errorMessage | Error message. | 'the year in not in valid range.' |
start | Start date boundary: 4-digit year number or Relative Year Offset. If set to undefined or null , it is being ignored. | 2000 |
end | End date boundary: 4-digit year number or Relative Year Offset. If set to undefined or null , it is being ignored. | 3y |
Instead of a concrete year below annotated shortcodes may be used to set the year boundary relative to the CURRENT year.
Annotation | Meaning | Example |
---|---|---|
0 | Current year. | 0 |
-1 | In past. | -1 |
1 | In future. | 1 |
-Ny | N years in past, relative from current year. | -2y |
Ny | N years in past, relative from current year. | 2y |
Example
// The value (year) must between the given years range.
year('error message', 2000, 2020);
// The value (year) must after the year (inclusive).
year('error message', 2000);
// The value (year) must before the year (inclusive).
year('error message', undefined|null, 2020);
/**
* Relative offsets, relative to current year.
*/
// Any year in past, until current year.
year('error message', -1, 0);
// Any year in future, starts from current year.
year('error message', 0, 1);
// Any year between 2 years ago, up to 2 years from current year.
year('error message', '-2y', '2y');
// Combined fixed year with relative year.
// Any year from 2000 until current year.
year('error message', 2000, 0);
The tested value must be passed to the validation as non zero number (string or number), otherwise the validation will fail implicitly with warning message.
Validation rule blueprint (typescript):
function email(errorMsg: string): ValidationRule {
const rx = /^[^@]+@.*\.[a-z]{2,5}$/
return (value: any): true|string {
// Invalid value
if (value.match(rx) === null) {
return errorMsg
}
// Valid value
return true
}
}
(value) => true|string
, where:
See contributing.md.
wegood is released under the MIT license. See license.txt.
FAQs
Tiny validation library, so wegood with data.
The npm package @briza/wegood receives a total of 110 weekly downloads. As such, @briza/wegood popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @briza/wegood demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 5 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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