@sanity/mutate
[!WARNING]
Disclaimer: This is work in progress, use at own risk!
Experimental toolkit for working with Sanity mutations in JavaScript & TypeScript
At a glance
- Declarative & composable mutation creators
- Utilities for applying mutations on in-memory documents (experimental)
- Local in-memory dataset replica with support for optimistic updates (experimental)
Features
- Mutations can be declared using creator functions and passed around like any other values, transformed and composed
into larger operations spanning multiple documents
- Mutations are mere descriptions of operations and can be serialized to a compact json format or a Sanity mutation API
request payload
- Nodes can be addressed using paths as JavaScript values instead of string paths
- Closely aligned with the Sanity.io mutation format
- Supports automatically adding
_key
's to objects in arrays, so you don't have to. - Experimental support for applying mutations on in-memory documents
- Great TypeScript support
Usage Example
import {
at,
create,
createIfNotExists,
patch,
SanityEncoder,
set,
setIfMissing,
} from '@sanity/mutate'
const mutations = [
create({_type: 'dog', name: 'Fido'}),
createIfNotExists({_id: 'document-1', _type: 'someType'}),
createIfNotExists({_id: 'other-document', _type: 'author'}),
patch('other-document', [
at('published', set(true)),
at('address', setIfMissing({_type: 'address'})),
at('address.city', set('Oslo')),
]),
]
const projectId = '<projectId>'
const dataset = '<dataset>'
fetch(`https://${projectId}.api.sanity.io/v2023-08-01/data/mutate/${dataset}`, {
method: 'POST',
mode: 'cors',
credentials: 'include',
headers: {
'Content-Type': 'application/json',
},
body: JSON.stringify(SanityEncoder.encode(mutations)),
})
.then(response => response.json())
.then(result => console.log(result))
Mutation creators
Mutations
create(document: SanityDocument)
: Create a new documentcreateIfNotExists(document: SanityDocument)
: Create a new document if it does not existcreateOrReplace(document: SanityDocument)
: Create a new document or replace an existing onedelete(documentId: SanityDocument)
: Delete a document (aliases: del
, destroy
)patch(documentId: string, patches: Patch | Patch[], options?: {ifRevision?: string})
: Patch a document. Can
optionally provide a revisionId
for optimistic locking. If
the current document revision doesn't match the given revision the patch mutation will fail when applied.
Patches
A patch is a combination of a node path and an operation. The node path is a
simplified JSONMatch path or an array of path segments that points to a
specific node in the document. The operation is one of the operations described below.
at(path: Path | string, operation: Operation)
: Create a patch from a path and an operation
Examples:
at('foo.bar', set('baz'))
at(['foo', 'bar'], set('baz'))
at(['array[0]'], insert('baz'))
at(['people', {_key: 'xyz'}, 'name'], set('Bjørge'))
at('people[_key=="xyz"].name', set('Bjørge'))
Patch Operations
Patch operations applicable for all data types
set(value: any)
: Set the value of the node to the given value
setIfMissing(value: any)
: Set the value of the node to the given value
if the node has no valueunset()
: Remove the node from the document
Object operations
assign(value: object)
: Do a shallow merge of the node with the given value. If the node is an object, the value will
be merged into the object similar to Object.assign(<currentValue>, value)
.unassign(attributes: string[])
: Remove the given attributes from the existing value.
Array operations
prepend(items: any[])
: Prepend the given items to the beginning of the arrayappend(items: any[])
: Append the given items to the end of the arrayinsert(items: any | any[], position: "before" | "after", referenceItem: number | {_key: string})
: Insert the given
items before or after the given before
or after
item. If before
or after
is not provided, the items will be
inserted at the beginning or end of the array.truncate(startIndex: number, endIndex?: number)
: Remove items from the array starting at startIndex
and ending
at endIndex
. If endIndex
is not provided, all items after startIndex
will be removed.replace(items: any | any[], referenceItem: number | {_key: string})
: Replaces the referenceItem
(addressed by
index or _key) with the given item
or items
. If items
is an array, referenceItem
will be replaced by the
items and any existing elements that comes after referenceItem
will be shifted to the right.upsert(items: any | any[], position: "before" | "after", referenceItem: number | {_key: string})
: Upsert one or more items
into the array. If the items match existing items in the array, the existing items will be replaced with the given
items. If the items do not match any existing items, it will be inserted into the array. ThereferenceItem
specifies a reference item to place missing items relative to. If. If not provided, any missing items will be inserted at
the beginning or end of the array, depending on position
. The position
option can be used to specify where to insert the item if it does not
match any existing items. If not provided, the item will be inserted at the end of the array.
Number operations
inc(value: number)
: Increment the number by the given valuedec(value: number)
: Decrement the number by the given value
String operations
diffMatchPatch(patch: string)
: Apply an incremental text patch to the current string. Read more
about diffMatchPatch.
Advanced examples
Define a set of operations and turn it into a patch mutation that can be applied on a set of documents
const patches = [
at('metadata', setIfMissing({})),
at('metadata.published', set(true)),
at('metadata.publishedAt', set(new Date().toISOString())),
]
const mutations = ['document-1', 'document-2', 'document-3'].map(id =>
patch(id, patches),
)
commitMutations(mutations)
Apply mutations on local documents (experimental)
Mutations can be applied to an in-memory collection of documents
import {applyInCollection} from '@sanity/mutate/_unstable_apply'
import {createIfNotExists, del} from '@sanity/mutate'
const initial = [{_id: 'deleteme', _type: 'foo'}]
const updated = applyInCollection(initial, [
createIfNotExists({_id: 'mydocument', _type: 'foo'}),
createIfNotExists({_id: 'anotherDocument', _type: 'foo'}),
del('deleteme'),
])
console.log(updated)
Note: when applying mutations on a collection, referential integrity is preserved. This means that if a mutation is effectively a noop (e.g. nothing actually changed), the same object reference will be returned.
import {applyInCollection} from '@sanity/mutate/_unstable_apply'
import {at, createIfNotExists, patch, set} from '@sanity/mutate'
const initial = [
{
_id: 'someDoc',
_type: 'foo',
value: 'ok',
nested: {value: 'something'},
otherNested: {message: 'something else'},
},
]
const updated = applyInCollection(initial, [
createIfNotExists({_id: 'someDoc', _type: 'foo'}),
patch('someDoc', [at('value', set('ok'))]),
patch('someDoc', [at('nested.value', set('something'))]),
])
console.log(initial === updated)
This is also the case for nodes unaffected by the mutations:
import {applyInCollection} from '@sanity/mutate/_unstable_apply'
import {at, createIfNotExists, patch, set} from '@sanity/mutate'
const initial = [
{
_id: 'someDoc',
_type: 'foo',
value: 'ok',
nested: {value: 'something'},
otherNested: {message: 'something else'},
},
]
const updated = applyInCollection(initial, [
createIfNotExists({_id: 'someDoc', _type: 'foo'}),
patch('someDoc', [at('value', set('ok'))]),
patch('someDoc', [at('nested.value', set('something'))]),
patch('someDoc', [at('otherNested.message', set('hello'))]),
])
console.log(initial[0].nested === updated[0].nested)
Apply a patch mutation to a single document
Alternatively, a patch mutation can be applied to a single document as long as its id matches the document id of the mutation:
import {applyPatchMutation} from '@sanity/mutate/_unstable_apply'
import {at, insert, patch, setIfMissing} from '@sanity/mutate'
const document = {_id: 'test', _type: 'foo'}
const updated = applyPatchMutation(
document,
patch('test', [
at('title', setIfMissing('Foo')),
at('cities', setIfMissing([])),
at('cities', insert(['Oslo', 'San Francisco'], 'after', 0)),
]),
)
console.log(updated)
Differences from Sanity API
To better align with a strict type system, @sanity/mutate
differs slightly from the Sanity API when applying patches. Although all the mutation types you can express with @sanity/mutate
can also be expressed as Sanity API mutations, the inverse is not necessarily true; The Sanity API (e.g. a listener) may produce patches that can't be represented in @sanity/mutate
without an extra conversion step that takes the current document into account. In addition, applying a patch in @sanity/mutate
behaves differently from applying the same patch using the Sanity API on a few accounts:
set
andsetIfMissing
does not create intermediate empty objects - Using the Sanity API, set
and setIfMissing
will create intermediate empty objects if any object along the given path doesn't already exist. In @sanity/mutate
, these patches will only apply to already existing objects.- Limited json match support. Sanity mutations supports a powerful path selection syntax for targeting multiple document nodes at once with json-match. To keep things simple, a
@sanity/mutate
patch can only target a single document node.