π Transform and βοΈ validate π objects.
- Destructure/restructure objects based on a map
- Format specific values (sanitise, normalise, etc.)
- Validate an object based on rules
Read more in the docs.
const exampleObject = {
example1: "This is a simple example",
example2: "Another simple example",
example3: "Another simple example to show arrays",
emaxpel4: "Pluck properties from the object and rename them",
example5: "DO SOME EXTRA FORMATTING AND RETURN AN OBJECT TO MERGE",
example6: "Ignore this property"
};
objectro.transform(
exampleObject,
// Pluck specific properties from an object to output
"example1",
["example2", "example3"],
// Give a map that transforms one property name to another.
{
emaxpel4: "example4",
// You can also pass a format function to transform that value
// further, such as sanitising, normalising or otherwise processing
// the value
// If the format function returns an object, then that object will
// be merged with the output object
example5: (value, propName) => ({
[propName]: value.toLowerCase(),
example6: "This is new!"
})
}
);
// Outputs:
// {
// example1: "This is a simple example",
// example2: "Another simple example",
// example3: "Another simple example to show arrays",
// example4: "Pluck properties from the object and rename them",
// example5: "do some extra formatting and return an object to merge",
// example6: "This is new!"
// }
objectro.validate(
{
name: "Objectro",
version: "1.1.0",
lastUpdated: "2022-01-09",
keywords: ["transform", "validate", "object", "javascript"],
randomNumber: 123,
nestedObject: {
example: true
}
},
{
// Will only return true if all nested rules match
all: {
// Will return true if at least one nested rule matches
any: {
// Will match positive if input object has either property
has: ["name", "version", "nestedObject.example"]
},
// Check if property value has one or many possible values
// Since this is within the `all` rule, all values must be
// present within the property value.
has: {
keywords: ["transform", "validate", "javascript"]
},
// Allows you to use validation rules to validate individual
// property values.
// Since this is within the `all` rule, all values must be
// present within the property value.
match: {
// Check if the property value type is a string
version: {
type: "string"
},
// Check if property value is greater than another value
randomNumber: {
gt: 100
},
// You can also use custom functions to validate properties
lastUpdated: value => new Date(value).getUTCFullYear() === 2019
},
// Negate the result of the following rules
not: {
has: {
// You can also reference nested object properties
"nestedObject.example": false
}
}
}
}
);
// Outputs:
// true
Read more in the docs.
<script src="//unpkg.com/objectro@1.1.0/dist/objectro.umd.js"></script>
<script>
// window.objectro should then be available
console.log(objectro);
</script>
npm i objectro
yarn add objectro
Then in your source code:
// ES5
const objectro = require("objectro").default;
const { transform, validate } = require("objectro");
// ES6
import objectro from "objectro";
import { transform, validate } from "objectro";
// TypeScript
import { TransformFn } from "objectro/lib/types"; // if you ever need access to specific objectro type definitions
import { transform, validate } from "objectro";
To download external dependencies:
npm i
To run tests (using Jest):
npm test
Got cool ideas? Have questions or feedback? Found a bug? Post an issue
Added a feature? Fixed a bug? Post a PR