@abalmus/validator
v1.4.0
Published
Core for Validator
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Validation Processor
Description
ValidationProcessor - low-level asynchronous validation engine. Designed for testing data, based on validation rules. Can be easily extended with custom validators. Compatible with any modern frameworks or VanillaJS.
Installation
// NPM
npm install @abalmus/validator
// YARN
yarn add @abalmus/validator
Usage
Validation processor initialization
import { ValidationProcessor } from '@abalmus/validator';
const constrains = {
rules: {
firstName: {
minlength: 10
}
},
messages: {
firstName: {
minlength: 'First name needs to be not less than 10 characters'
}
}
};
/*
* ValidateProcessor constructor
* params: ( constrains, [options] )
* returns: instance of the validation processor
*/
const validationProcessor = new ValidationProcessor(constrains);
/*
* validate
* params: ( fieldName, value, [options] )
* returns: undefined
*/
validationProcessor.validate('firstName', 'myname');
Getting validation errors
The easiest way of getting errors from validation processor is using ErrorPopulator.
import { ErrorsPopulator } from '@abalmus/validator';
/*
* ErrorPopulator constructor
* params: ( validationProcessorInstance, [options] )
* returns: errors populator instance
*/
const errors = new ErrorsPopulator(validationProcessor);
/*
* getByField emthod
* params: ( fieldName, [options] )
* returns: Promise
*/
errors.getByField('firstName').then((errors) => console.log(errors));
// [{minlength: "First name needs to be not less than 10 characters"}]
Validators
Build in Validators
const constrains = {
rules: {
firstName: {
minLength: 4,
maxLength: 10,
required: true,
equal: 'John',
pattern: /^[a-zA-Z ]+$/
}
},
messages: {
firstName: {
minLength: 'Please insert minimum 4 characters',
maxLength: 'Please insert maximum 10 characters',
required: 'Please insert first name',
equal: 'Please insert correct name',
pattern: 'Only letters allowed'
}
}
}
"maxLength" and "minLength"
minLength
and maxLength
each of these validators convert any value to a string and checks length property.
"equal" validator
Simple equality check, comparing value and type.
"pattern" validator
JavaScript Regexp test method executes a search for a match between a regular expression provided in pattern
property and a specified string.
"async" validator
Async validator created for server side validations. The example email address existence, when you make an ajax call to check if email exists or not.
const constrains = {
rules: {
email: {
async: {
url: 'api/email/exist',
// ...other fetch API options
}
}
},
messages: {
email: {
async: 'Email already exists.'
}
}
}
Default server side response format:
{
status: 'ERROR', // ['SUCCESS', 'ERROR', 'INFO']
message: 'Server message goes here' // will be rendered below the field
}
Custom Validators
The most important part of this library is a creation of custom validators. This is powerful mechanism of extending validation processor. To register validator lets call validator.registerValidator
method.
import {
validator,
ValidationProcessor
} from '@abalmus/validator';
validator.registerValidator('moreOrEqual', (value, ruleValue) => {
return (Number(value) >= Number(ruleValue));
});
Now we can use moreOrEqual
validator inside constrains.
const constrains = {
rules: {
age: {
moreOrEqual: 16
}
},
messages: {
age: {
moreOrEqual: 'You needs to be at least 16 years old'
}
}
}
const validationProcessor = new ValidationProcessor(constrains);
validationProcessor.validate('age', 18); // Valid!
"dependsOn" rule wrapper
One more powerful and useful mechanism is dependsOn
rules wrapper. This wrapper allows to apply validation rules depends on other values.
The example phone pattern for Germany is different than in the United States.
const constrains = {
rules: {
phoneNumber: {
dependsOn: {
country: {
US: {
rules: {
pattern: // US phone number regex
minLength: 10
}
},
DE: {
rules: {
pattern: // DE phone number regex
minLength: 8
}
}
}
}
}
}
};
As you can see there are nested dependsOn wrapper and rules. The rules inside the country automatically applied based on country value.
How to use:
Option 1: Passing dependsOnValues
to ValidationProcessor config on initialization phase
const validationProcessor = new ValidationProcessor(constrains, {
dependsOnValues: {
country: 'US'
}
});
validationProcessor.validate('phoneNumber', '123456787') // not valid
Option 2: Passing dependsOnValues
as a third parameter of the validate
method
const validationProcessor = new ValidationProcessor(constrains);
validationProcessor.validate('phoneNumber', '123456787', { country: 'US' }) // not valid