v8n
v1.5.1
Published
Dead simple fluent JavaScript validation library
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Introducing v8n
v8n is an acronym for validation. Notice that it has exactly eight letters between v and n in the "validation" word. This is the same pattern we are used to seeing with i18n, a11y, l10n ...
Chainable API
Create validations very easily with its chainable API:
v8n()
.string()
.minLength(5)
.first("H")
.last("o")
.test("Hello"); // true
Incredibly fluent
Mix rules and modifiers together to create complex validations with great ease and fluency:
v8n()
.array()
.every.number()
.not.some.negative()
.test([1, 2, -3]); // false - no negative please!
So fluent that it looks like English:
v8n()
.some.not.uppercase() // expects that some character is not uppercase
.test("Hello"); // true
v8n()
.not.some.uppercase() // expects that no character is uppercase
.test("Hello"); // false
Notice how we made very different validation strategies just by changing the order of the modifiers. It's so intuitive that seems to be impossible, but this is v8n.
Customizable
Create your own custom validation rules in a very intuitive way:
function foo() {
return value => value === "bar";
}
v8n.extend({ foo });
v8n will treat them like built-in ones:
v8n()
.string()
.foo()
.test("bar"); // true
Reusable
Export validations just like you're used to do with your JavaScript modules:
specialNumber.js
import v8n from "v8n";
export default v8n()
.number()
.between(50, 100)
.not.even();
and use them anywhere you want:
import specialNumber from "../specialNumber";
specialNumber.test(63); // true
For any kind of data
Use v8n to validate your data regardless of its type. You can validate primitives, arrays, objects and whatever you want! You can also use them together!
// numbers
v8n()
.number()
.between(5, 10)
.test(7); //true
// strings
v8n()
.string()
.minLength(3)
.test("foo"); // true
// arrays
v8n()
.array()
.every.even()
.test([2, 4, 6]); // true
// objects
const myData = { id: "fe03" };
v8n()
.schema({
id: v8n().string()
})
.test(myData); // true
For any kind of validation
Do simple validations with boolean based tests. Get more information about your validation process with exception based tests. And of course, perform asynchronous tests as well. All in one library.
Boolean based validation:
v8n()
.string()
.first("H")
.test("Hello"); // true
Exception based validation:
try {
v8n()
.string()
.first("b")
.check("foo");
} catch (ex) {
console.log(ex.rule.name); // first
}
Getting all failures:
const failed = v8n()
.string()
.minLength(3)
.testAll(10);
failed;
// [
// ValidationError { rule: { name: "string", ... } },
// ValidationError { rule: { name: "minLength", ... } }
// ]
Async validation:
If your validation strategy has some rule that performs time consuming validation, like a back-end check, you should use asynchronous validation:
v8n()
.somAsyncRule()
.testAsync("foo") // returns a Promise
.then(result => {
/* valid! */
})
.catch(ex => {
/* invalid! */
});
Shareable
Share your rules with the world, and use theirs as well.
Create useful validation rules and share them with the open source community, and let people around the world validate without reinventing the wheel.
Ready to use!
There are a lot of built-in rules and modifiers for you to use already
implemented in v8n
's core. Take a look at all of them in our
API page. But if you can't find what you
need, go ahead and make it.
Tiny!
All these incredible features for just a few bytes:
Architecture
The v8n core is composed of rules
and modifiers
. They are used together
to build complex validations in an easy way.
Rules
Rules are the heart of the v8n
ecosystem. You use them to build your
validation strategies:
v8n()
.string()
.minLength(3)
.test("Hello"); // true
In this code snippet, we're using two rules (string
and minLength
) to build
our validation strategy. So our validated value ("Hello"
) is valid because
it's a string and it is at least 3 characters long.
Rules can be more powerful if used along with modifiers. Learn about them in the next section.
Modifiers
Modifiers can be used to change rules meaning. For example, you can use the
not
modifier to expect the reversed result from a rule:
v8n()
.not.equal(5)
.test(5); // false
You can check all available modifiers on our documentation page.
Modifiers are very powerful. They work as decorators for rules. When used together, they allow you to build very complex validations.
Contribute
Contributions of any kind are welcome! Read our CONTRIBUTING guide.