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validated-proxy

validated-proxy npm version Build Status Coverage Status

A validated proxy represents a set of valid changes to be applied later onto any object. Each change is tested against an optional validation, and if valid, the change is stored and applied when executed.

Documentation

Latest documentation is available here.

Getting started

Install using yarn:

yarn add validated-proxy

Or using npm:

npm install --save validated-proxy

Then import it and create a new validated proxy:

import { validatedProxy } from 'validated-proxy';
import {
  validatePresence,
  validateLength,
  validateNumber
} from '../path/to/validators';

const user = {
  name: 'Billy Bob',
  age: 25
};
const updatedUser = validatedProxy(user, {
  validations: {
    name: [validatePresence(true), validateLength({ min: 4 })],
    age: [validatePresence(true), validateNumber({ gte: 18 })]
  }
});

// valid changes
updatedUser.name = 'Michael Bolton';
user.name; // 'Billy Bob'
updatedUser.flush();
user.name; // 'Michael Bolton'

// invalid changes
updatedUser.name = 'a';
user.name; // 'Billy Bob'
updatedUser.errors; // [
//   { key: 'name',
//     messages: ['name must be more than 4 characters'],
//     value: 'a'
//   }
// ]
updatedUser.flush();
user.name; // 'Billy Bob'

Custom validators

A validator is a higher order function that returns a validation function. The validator can pass options to the validation function. The validation function is the function that is invoked when you set a value on the BufferedProxy.

Here's an example of creating a validator that validates if a value is of a given type:

import { ValidatorFunction } from 'validated-proxy';

type Primitive =
  | 'boolean'
  | 'number'
  | 'string'
  | 'symbol'
  | 'null'
  | 'undefined';
type NonPrimitive = 'object';
interface ValidatorOptions {
  type: Primitive | NonPrimitive;
}

const validateTypeof = ({ type }: ValidatorOptions): ValidatorFunction => {
  return (key, newValue, oldValue) => {
    return {
      message: `${newValue} is not of type '${type}'`,
      validation: typeof newValue === type
    };
  };
};

export default validateTypeof;

Now you can use your validator like so:

import { validatedProxy } from 'validated-proxy';
import validateTypeof from '../path/to/validateTypeof';

const user = { name: 'Billy Bob' };
const updatedUser = validatedProxy(user, {
  validations: { name: validateTypeof({ type: 'string' }) }
});

updatedUser.name = 123; // error

Custom validator type safety

If you're creating a custom validator that relies on the new value to be of a certain type, you can specify it as a generic type parameter to ValidatorFunction<T> (where T is the type of your new value):

import { ValidatorFunction } from 'validated-proxy';

interface ValidatorOptions {
  is: number;
}

const validateLength = ({
  is
}: ValidatorOptions): ValidatorFunction<string> => {
  return (key, newValue, oldValue) => {
    return {
      message: `${key} must be exactly ${is} characters`,
      validation: is === newValue.length // `newValue` is a `string`
    };
  };
};

export default validateLength;

More examples can be seen here.

Custom error handlers

The error handler is a function that is called when an invalid value is set. This is in addition to the error that is already stored in the cache. By default, the error handler is a no-op (does nothing). You can specify a custom error handler; for example, you could throw an error, log error messages, send them to a server, etc:

const proxy = validatedProxy(original, {
  errorHandler: errorMessages => { /** do something here **/},
  validations: /** ... */
});

Custom execution handlers

The execution handler is a function that is used to set the changes on the target object. By default, this is Object.assign. You can specify a custom execution handler; for example, you could use Lodash's assign, Ember's set, and so forth:

const proxy = validatedProxy(original, {
  executionHandler: (target, changes) => { /** do something here **/},
  validations: /** ... */
});

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