validate-arguments
v0.0.8
Published
Validate arguments, declaritive
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4,212
Readme
validate-arguments-js
Validate arguments, declarative.
Installation
npm install validate-arguments
The code itself depends on lodash
, and will propably run just fine in the browser using require.js
.
Documentation
This module levarages some of the validation methods from lodash
, but by offering you a declaritive syntax and nice error strings:
- array
- boolean
- date
- element
- empty
- finite
- function
- null
- number
- object
- plainObject
- regexp
- string
And adds the following additional ones:
- whole ( An integer )
- real ( A real number that isn't NaN )
- natural ( Positive integer )
- primitive ( 'number', 'boolean', 'string' )
When passing a constructor (function) as an isa
, an instanceof
check is done.
var Validate = require('validate-arguments');
function doSomething(withNamedArguments) {
var args = Validate.named(arguments, {
number: 'whole',
name: 'string'
callback: 'function'
options: {
isa: 'plainObject',
optional: true
},
validation: Validate // performs an instanceof
});
if (!args.isValid()) {
throw args.errorString();
}
// continue safely
}
Look at the test cases for more examples.
Node that validations may be nested:
var args = Validate.named(arguments, {
address: {
primary: {
street: 'string',
housenumber: 'number'
}
},
});
Methods
named( named, validationSpec )
Returns a validationObject
for further inspection. named
should be a non-empty plain Object
, containing all the keys documented in the validationSpec
.
The validationSpec
should be an object, where the keys match the desired input. You may use the form { thing: 'string' }
over { thing: { isa: 'string' } }
.
When passed an arguments
object instead of a plain object, the first key of the arguments is used.
positional( arguments, ... )
Validate positional arguments, either an array or arguments object. Spec may be provided as an array in the second argument, or a variable number of arguments.
validate( arguments, ... )
Validate arguments, freeform.
If the second argument contains a string, it is treated as a positional argument with one element.
Return values
Both validateObject
and validatePositional
return a validationObject
with the following methods:
- isValid: A boolean indication the validness
- errors: An array containing positions or keys of invalid arguments
- get: Retrieve values from the original input, array index or key
- values: Return an array of values ( not that usable )
- errorString: An error string explaining what went wrong (verbosely)
Testing
cd validate-arguments-js
npm install
npm test