json-typescript-mapper
v1.1.3
Published
For single page application, data sources are obtained from API server. Instead of directly using api data, we definitely require an adapter layer to transform data as needed. Furthermore, the adapter inverse the the data dependency from API server(AP
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json-typescript-mapper
Introduction
For single page application, data sources are obtained from API server. Instead of directly using api data, we definitely require an adapter layer to transform data as needed. Furthermore, the adapter inverse the the data dependency from API server(API Server is considered uncontrollable and highly unreliable as data structure may be edit by backend coder for some specific purposes)to our adapter which becomes reliable. Thus, this library is created as the adapter.
Get Started
npm install json-typescript-mapper --save
Environment
- NodeJS
- Browser
Language
- Typescript
Typescript
import {deserialize} from 'json-typescript-mapper';
deserialize(<Class Type>, <JSON Object>);
serialize(<Object>);
Example
Here is a complex example, hopefully could give you an idea of how to use it (for more on how to use, checkout /spec which are unit test cases):
class Student {
@JsonProperty('name')
fullName:string;
constructor() {
this.fullName = undefined;
}
}
class Address {
@JsonProperty('first-line')
firstLine:string;
@JsonProperty('second-line')
secondLine:string;
@JsonProperty({clazz: Student})
student:Student;
city:string;
constructor() {
this.firstLine = undefined;
this.secondLine = undefined;
this.city = undefined;
this.student = undefined
}
}
class Person {
@JsonProperty('Name')
name:string;
@JsonProperty('xing')
surname:string;
age:number;
@JsonProperty({clazz: Address, name: 'AddressArr'})
addressArr:Address[];
@JsonProperty({clazz: Address, name: 'Address'})
address:Address;
constructor() {
this.name = void 0;
this.surname = void 0;
this.age = void 0;
this.addressArr = void 0;
this.address = void 0;
}
}
Now here is what API server return, assume it is already parsed to JSON object.
let json = {
"Name": "Mark",
"xing": "Galea",
"age": 30,
"AddressArr": [
{
"first-line": "Some where",
"second-line": "Over Here",
"city": "In This City",
"student": {
name1: "Ailun"
}
},
{
"first-line": "Some where",
"second-line": "Over Here",
"city": "In This City",
"student": {
name1: "Ailun"
}
}
],
"Address": {
"first-line": "Some where",
"second-line": "Over Here",
"city": "In This City",
"student": {
name: "Ailun"
}
}
Simply, just map it use following code. The mapping is based on <@JsonProperty> decorator meta data.
const person = deserialize(Person, json);
If you want to reverse the action, from the other way round:
const json = serialize(person);
Notice
Remember to add: experimentalDecorators and emitDecoratorMetadata in your tsconfig.json. This is essential to enable decorator support for your typescript program. Example shown as followings:
{
"compilerOptions": {
"module": "commonjs",
"target": "es5",
"sourceMap": true,
"experimentalDecorators": true,
"emitDecoratorMetadata": true
},
"exclude": [
"node_modules"
]
}
Test Report
The test case will be covered in the next push. This caused by inconsistent return type. ![alt tag](/git-img/Test Results — spec_index.ts.png)
Fixed
- Fixed test cases. According to typescript official website tips NULL IS BAD, therefore I updated all null value to void 0 which is a better expression than undefined (idea from underscore source code). Most cases it won't affect previous version at all.
Contributor
ChangeLog
2017-02-20
json-typescript-mapper 1.1.1
- Added serialized function
- Passed more unit tests