Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

paramo

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
38
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

paramo

🌵Swiss-army knife of stringifying, parsing and manipulating URL parameters by applying types to the parameters.

  • 1.16.3
  • latest
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
265
decreased by-17.7%
Maintainers
1
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source
Paramo

Swiss-army knife of stringifying, parsing and manipulating URL parameters by applying types to the parameters.

Travis   npm   License MIT   Coveralls   code style: prettier

npm: npm install paramo

yarn: yarn add paramo


Getting Started

Paramo takes the very useful query-string library and applies the concept of types as an added layer. Although query-string provides some typecasting of values, it's far from ideal. Using the example below we can setup a type system to transform URL parameters back and forth between string representations.

import { create, type } from 'paramo';

const types = {
    name: type.String,
    age: type.Int,
};

const user = create(types);

// { name: 'Adam', age: 34 }
user.parse('name=Adam&age=34');

// name=Adam&age=34
user.stringify({ name: 'Adam', age: 34 });

The String and Int types are probably the most simple types. Using the Bool type takes a little more configuration if the default isn't sufficient, as booleans can be represented as strings in many various ways. With that in mind, you can provide a second argument to the create function which overrides the defaults – in our case to modify the string representations of boolean values to be the pirate-esque yar and naw.

import { create, type } from 'paramo';

const types = {
    name: type.String,
    age: type.Int,
    developer: type.Bool,
};

const user = create(types, {
    booleanStrings: ['yar', 'naw'],
});

// { name: 'Adam', age, 34: developer: true }
user.parse('name=Adam&age=34&developer=yar');

// name=Adam&age=34&developer=yar
user.stringify({ name: 'Adam', age: 34, developer: true });

We can then introduce the concept of arrays which uses the query-string API for specifying how lists are represented – by default as duplicate keys.

import { create, type, option } from 'paramo';

const types = {
    name: type.String,
    age: type.Int,
    developer: type.Bool,
    languages: type.Array(type.String),
};

const user = create(types, {
    booleanStrings: ['yar', 'naw'],
    arrayFormat: option.arrayFormat.comma,
});

// { name: 'Adam', age, 34: developer: true, languages: ['JavaScript', 'Ruby', 'Haskell'] }
user.parse('name=Adam&age=34&developer=yar&languages=JavaScript,Ruby,Haskell');

// name=Adam&age=34&developer=yar&languages=JavaScript,Ruby,Haskell
user.stringify({
    name: 'Adam',
    age: 34,
    developer: true,
    languages: ['Javascript', 'Ruby', 'Haskell'],
});

Default Values

You can set defaults for the parameters by using the array notation. For example if by default all users are developers, then you can bake that into your types.

const types = {
    name: type.String,
    age: type.Int,
    developer: [type.Bool, true],
    languages: type.Array(type.String),
};

When you user.stringify all parameters are still set, but in some cases you may wish for the default values to be omitted, as the default values may not matter if they are also baked into the back-end. For these instances you can set the stripDefaults option when creating the type instance.

const user = create(types, {
    booleanStrings: ['yar', 'naw'],
    stripDefaults: true,
});

Furthermore when dealing with defaults you may wish for defaults to appear in user.parse unless they're defined in the URL parameters – you can use the includeDefaults option. You can use the same option for user.stringify if you don't set the aforementioned stripDefaults option.

Configurable Options

OptionDefaultDescription
includeDefaultsfalseInclude default values when parsing.
stripDefaultsfalseInclude default values when stringifying.
stripRedundantfalseExclude parameters which are not included in the types.
booleanStrings['true', 'false']Tuple of custom boolean types: ['yup', 'nup'].
arrayFormatnullquery-string option for representing arrays as strings.
arrayFormatSeparator,query-string option for setting a custom separator.
dateFormatYYYY-MM-DDmoment formatting for dates.
keyFormatnullApplying snakecase, kebabcase and pascalcase to the parameters.
splitKeysnullAllows the custom splitting of keys when decamelising.
processKeysnullAllows the setting up of a key processing function.
stripPrefixfalseWhether to include the question mark when stringifying params.
encodeParamstrueDetermines whether keys and values are encoded.
decodeParamstrueDetermines whether keys and values are decoded.
sortParamsfalseFunction for sorting the params when stringifying.
plainObjectfalseForce the parsed object to return a plain object.

FAQs

Package last updated on 18 Jul 2020

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc