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nativemodels

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nativemodels

Native Models for Javascript

Source
npmnpm
Version
1.4.0
Version published
Weekly downloads
38
-48.65%
Maintainers
1
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NativeModels

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Install Size

Native Models provides a way to map objects in a clean and typed way. The main goal is to ensure runtime type checking and consistent models for APIs.

Getting Started

const { createModel } = require('nativemodels');
const { array, boolean, computed, date, int, object, string } = require('nativemodels/datatypes');

const photoSchema = {
	ext: string(),
	url: string().required(),
};

const contactSchema = {
	email: string(),
	phone: string(),
	url: string(),
};

const userSchema = {
	accountID: int().nullable(),
	contact: object(contactSchema),
	created: date(),
	firstName: string().required(),
	fullName: computed((record) => `${record.firstName} ${record.lastName}`),
	isAdmin: boolean().nullable(),
	lastName: string().required(),
	photos: array(object(photoSchema)),
	typeID: int().default(2),
};

const userModel = createModel(userSchema);

const johnSmith = userModel({
	contact: {
		email: 'j.smith@example.com',
	},
	firstName: 'John',
	lastName: 'Smith',
	photos: [
		{
			ext: '.jpg',
			url: 'https://example.com/img.jpg',
		},
	],
});
// => { firstName: 'John', lastName: 'Smith', fullName: 'John Smith', ...}

const userRecords = [
	{
		firstName: 'John',
		lastName: 'Smith',
	},
	{
		firstName: 'Jane',
		lastName: 'Doe',
	},
];
const users = userRecords.map(userModel);
// => [{ firstName: 'John', lastName: 'Smith', fullName: 'John Smith', ...}]

const janeDoe = userModel({
	...johnSmith,
	firstName: 'Jane',
	lastName: 'Doe',
});
// => { firstName: 'Jane', lastName: 'Doe', fullName: 'Jane Doe', ...}

Datatype API

Datatype methods that can be chained when defining schema.

datatypes.default(defaultValue)

Sets a default value if no value is set

datatypes.nullable()

Allows the value set to be null (useful for database models)

datatypes.required()

Forces the value to be required. Is ignored if default value is set

Datatypes

  • array
  • boolean
  • computed
  • date
  • float
  • int
  • object
  • string

Extending Datatypes

datatypes.validate(value, name)

If value is valid, returns true, else throws error. Name is key on object;

datatypes.parse(value)

Parses the value being set. Used to extend base datatype

Customtypes

Custom types are types that are useful to have and common enough for use to include them in our library. They currently include

  • email
  • enumberable
  • guid
  • phone
  • url

Examples

const { email, enumberable, guid, phone, url } = require('nativemodels/customtypes');

const model = createModel({
	email: email(),
	enumberable: enumberable(['FOO', 'BAR']),
	guid: guid(),
	phone: phone(),
	url: url(),
});

Async / Promise Computed Functions

Sometimes computed values aren't syncronous. To help you deal with that, we have provided the resolver method which will allow you to resolve all computed functions that are promises or async functions.

NOTE: You must return an async function, Promise or syncronous result. Generators will not work with this

WARNING: This is an N+1 unoptimized resolver meaning that for each nested array / object will require an extra iteration.

const { createModel, resolver } = require('nativemodels');
const { boolean, computed } = require('nativemodels/datatypes');

const schema = {
	async: computed(
		(record) =>
			new Promise((succeed, reject) => (record.succeed ? succeed(1) : reject(new Error('Failed to resolve')))),
	),
	succeed: boolean().default(false),
};

const model = createModel(schema);
const data = model({ succeed: true });

const resolvedData = await resolver(data);
// => { async: 1, succeed: true }

Schema Parsing of resolved data

You can provide a second option to resolver() that will allow you to recieve back an object that has had the schema applied to it.

const { createModel, resolver } = require('nativemodels');
const { boolean, computed, int } = require('nativemodels/datatypes');

const schema = {
	async: computed(
		(record) =>
			new Promise((succeed, reject) => (record.succeed ? succeed(1) : reject(new Error('Failed to resolve')))),
	),
	succeed: boolean().default(false),
};

const resolvedSchema = {
	async: int(),
	succeed: boolean(),
};

const model = createModel(schema);
const data = model({ succeed: true });

const resolvedData = await resolver(data, resolvedSchema);
// => { async: 1, succeed: true }

Options for createModel

caseSensitive

The caseSensitive option default(true) allows you to turn off caseSensitive matching. This is useful for ignoreing and parsing user submitted data into a nice clean format while still maintaining model integrity

cosnt { createModel } = require('nativemodels');
const { string } = require('nativemodels/datatypes');

const options = {
	caseSensitive: false
};

const schema = {
	foo: string(),
};

const model = createModel(schema, options);
const data = model({ FOO: 'bar' });
// => { foo: 'bar' }

Options are shallow by default, so if you have a deeply nested object, you will need to pass down options by hand.

cosnt { createModel } = require('nativemodels');
const { object, string } = require('nativemodels/datatypes');

const options = {
	caseSensitive: false
};

const schema = {
	foo: string(),
};

const deepSchema = {
	nested: object(schema, options)
};

const model = createModel(deepSchema, options);
const data = model({ Nested: { FOO: 'bar' } });
// => { nested: { foo: 'bar' } }

FAQs

Package last updated on 22 Oct 2018

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