- Supports checking primitives or objects with schemas
- Apply default value if validation fails.
- Easy to use and learn but powerful
- It's totally composable
- Fast and without dependencies
- Six behaviors:
mustBe
returns the value evaluated or it throws. (default export)isValid
returnstrue
orfalse
, never throwsisValidOrLog
returnstrue
orfalse
and log error, never throwshasErrors
returns null or Array of errors, never throwsmustBeOrThrowAll
returns the value evaluated or throws AggregateErrorisValidOrLogAll
returnstrue
orfalse
and log all errors, never throws
- Works with ESModules or CommonJS from Node 10.x or Deno
- Works in all modern browsers
- Works in all frontend frameworks: React, Angular, Vue, etc...
DEPRECATION WARNING:
isValidOrThrow
behavior has been deprecated in favor ofmustBe
. Learn more at mustBe
import mustBe, { isValid, isValidOrLog } from "garn-validator";
const isValidPassword = isValid(
String, // must be String
(str) => str.length >= 8, // and length >= 8
/[a-z]/, // and have at least one lowercase
/[A-Z]/, // and have at least one uppercase
/[0-9]/, // and have at least one digit
/[-_/!¡?¿$%&/()]/ // and have at least one especial character
);
isValidPassword("12345Aa?"); // returns true
const isValidName = mustBe(String, (name) => name.length > 3).or("anonymous"); // will auto correct to 'anonymous' if fails
const isValidAge = isValidOrLog(
Number,
(age) => age > 18,
(age) => age < 40
);
isValidAge(15); // false, and logs 15 do not match validator (age) => age > 18
// Composition
const isValidUser = mustBe({
name: isValidName,
age: isValidAge,
password: isValidPassword,
country: ["ES", "UK"], // 'ES' or 'UK'
});
const newUser = isValidUser({
name: "", // will be fixed
age: 38,
password: "12345zZ?",
country: "ES",
}); // returns { name: 'anonymous', age: 38, password: '12345zZ?', country: 'ES' }
const anotherUser = isValidUser({
name: "garn",
age: 38,
password: "1234", // incorrect
country: "ES",
}); // it throws --> TypeValidationError: At path /password "1234" do not match validator (str) => str.length >= 8
- Get started
- In depth
- Roadmap
npm install garn-validator
// default export is mustBe
import mustBe from "garn-validator";
// or use named export
import { mustBe } from "garn-validator";
const { mustBe } = require("garn-validator/commonjs");
// or use de default export
const mustBe = require("garn-validator/commonjs").default;
The library can be used as is in typescript
Import from deno third party modules: deno.land/x/garn_validator
// mod.ts
import mustBe from "https://deno.land/x/garn_validator/src/index.js";
To have type definitions you can do:
import * as garnValidator from "https://deno.land/x/garn_validator/src/index.js";
import * as ValidatorTypes from "https://deno.land/x/garn_validator/src/index.d.ts";
garnValidator as typeof ValidatorTypes;
const { mustBe } = garnValidator;
import mustBe from "garn-validator"; // default export is mustBe
const isValidUser = mustBe({ name: String, age: Number });
isValidUser({ name: "garn", age: 38 }); // returns { name: "garn", age: 38 }
isValidUser({ name: "garn", age: "38" }); // it throws
mustBe(Number)(2); // returns 2
mustBe(String)(2); // it throws
mustBe(Array)([1, 2]); // returns [1, 2]
mustBe(Object)([1, 2]); // it throws
Learn more in depth at Constructors
mustBe("a")("a"); // returns "a"
mustBe(true)(false); // it throws
Learn more in depth at Primitives
mustBe(/a*/)("a"); // returns "a"
mustBe(/a/)("b"); // it throws
Learn more in depth at RegExp
mustBe((value) => value > 0)(33); // returns 33
mustBe((value) => value > 0)(-1); // wil throw
mustBe(Number.isNaN)(NaN); // returns NaN
mustBe(Number.isInteger)(1.1); // wil throw
Learn more in depth at Custom function
mustBe(["a", "b"])("a"); // returns "a"
mustBe(["a", "b"])("c"); // it throws
mustBe([Number, String])("18"); // returns "18"
mustBe([null, undefined, false, 0, ""])(18); // it throws
Learn more in depth at Enums
mustBe(Array, (array) => array.length === 2)([1, 2]); // returns [1, 2]
mustBe(
(v) => v > 0,
(v) => v < 50
)(100); // it throws
Learn more in depth at Validations in serie (AND operator)
const schema = { a: Number, b: Number }; // a and b are required
const obj = { a: 1, b: 2 };
mustBe(schema)(obj); // returns obj
mustBe({ a: 1 })({ a: 1, b: 2 }); // returns { a: 1, b: 2 }, because b is not checked
mustBe({ c: Number })({ a: 1, b: 2 }); // it throws (c is missing)
// Optional keys
mustBe({ x$: String })({}); // returns {}
Learn more in depth at Schema
All behaviors run the same algorithm but differs in what returns and how behaves.
There are six behaviors that can be divided in two categories:
-
It stops in first error (bail):
mustBe
returns the value evaluated or it throws. (default export)isValid
returnstrue
orfalse
, never throwsisValidOrLog
returnstrue
orfalse
and log error, never throws
-
It collects all Errors:
hasErrors
returns null or Array of errors, never throwsmustBeOrThrowAll
returns the value evaluated or throws AggregateErrorisValidOrLogAll
returnstrue
orfalse
and log all errors, never throws
mustBe
returns the value evaluated or it throws.
let input = "Garn";
let userName = mustBe(String)(input); // return 'Garn'
let input = "Garn";
let userName;
let isValidName = mustBe(String, (val) => val.length > 4);
try {
userName = isValidName(input); // it throws
} catch (err) {
userName = "anonymous";
}
mustBe
may have attached an .or() to apply a default value if the validation fail.
let input = "Garn";
let isValidName = mustBe(String, (val) => val.length > 4).or("anonymous");
let userName = isValidName(input); // returns 'anonymous'
The .or() can receive a function to apply a transformation to the original value.
let input = "42";
let asNumber = mustBe(Number).or((value /* "42" */) => Number(value));
let number = asNumber(input); // returns 42
If you need to apply a function as default, you can use a function the returns a function.
let input = "i am not a function";
let noop = () => {};
let mustBeFunction = mustBe(Function).or(() => noop);
let fn = mustBeFunction(input); // returns () => {}
It can work nested in a schema
let input = { name: "Garn" };
let isValidName = mustBe(String, (val) => val.length > 4).or("anonymous");
let user = mustBe({ name: isValidName })(input); // { name:'anonymous' }
If the .or() fails the whole validation will fail
let input = "not a valid number";
let transformToNumberIfPosible = (maybeNumber) => {
let number = Number(maybeNumber);
if (number == maybeNumber) return number;
else throw new TypeError("not valid number");
};
let asNumber = mustBe(Number).or(transformToNumberIfPosible);
let number = asNumber(input); // it throws CastError (aggregateError) with TypeError: not valid number within its array of errors
isValid
returns true
or false
never throws, so if it fails for any reason you should know it won't tell you anything but false.
import { isValid } from "garn-validator";
// stops in first Error
isValid(/[a-z]/)("g"); // returns true
isValid(/[a-z]/)("G"); // returns false, doesn't throws
isValidOrLog
is the same as isValid
but log first error found and stops validating.
isValidOrLogAll
returns true
or false
and log all errors, never throws
import { isValidOrLog } from "garn-validator";
// stops in first Error
isValidOrLog(/[a-z]/)("g"); // do nothing (but also returns true)
isValidOrLog(/[a-z]/)("G"); // logs error and return false
hasErrors
returns null or Array with all errors found, never throws.
It's very useful to show the user all errors that need to be fixed.
import { hasErrors } from "garn-validator";
// return null or array or errors
// checks until the end
hasErrors(/[a-z]/)("g"); // null
hasErrors(/[a-z]/, Number)("G"); // [TypeValidationError, TypeValidationError]
mustBe
returns the value evaluated or it throws the first error found.
try {
mustBe({ a: Number, b: String })({ a: null, b: null });
} catch (error) {
error instanceof TypeValidationError; // true
error.message; // At path /a null do not match constructor Number
}
mustBeOrThrowAll
returns the value evaluated or it throws an AggregateError
with all errors found.
try {
mustBeOrThrowAll({ a: Number, b: String })({ a: null, b: null });
} catch (error) {
error instanceof AggregateError; // true
error instanceof SchemaValidationError; // true
console.log(error);
/*
SchemaValidationError: value {"a":null,"b":null} do not match schema {"a":Number,"b":String}
*/
console.log(error.errors);
/*
[
TypeValidationError: At path /a null do not match constructor Number ,
TypeValidationError: At path /b null do not match constructor String ,
]
*/
}
But if it finds only one error, it will throw TypeValidationError
, no AggregateError
try {
mustBeOrThrowAll({ a: Number, b: String })({ a: null, b: "str" });
} catch (error) {
console.log(error);
/*
TypeValidationError: At path /a null do not match constructor Number ,
*/
error instanceof TypeValidationError; // true
error instanceof SchemaValidationError; // false
}
Learn more at Errors
The library has a bunch of pre-made validations (and growing), which makes easier validations of stings, numbers, objects or dates.
Learn more at utils test
import {
mustBe,
arrayOf,
and,
Integer,
Numeric,
Positive,
Lowercase,
before,
} from "garn-validator";
let Schema = {
name: Lowercase,
birthday: before(new Date()),
height: and(Number, Positive, Integer),
creditCard: Numeric,
books_id: arrayOf(String),
};
let data = {
name: "garn",
birthday: "1982-03-16",
height: 170,
creditCard: "42424242424242",
books_id: ["123", "321"],
};
let user = mustBe(Schema).or(null)(data);
or(...validations)
Is just a shortcut to an enum.
Not to be confused with
mustBe().or()
import { mustBe, or } from "garn-validator";
mustBe(or(Number, String));
// same as:
mustBe([Number, String]);
and(...validations)
is a shortcut to mustBe(...args)
, but semantically useful.
import { mustBe, and } from "garn-validator";
mustBe({ age: and(Number, (num) => num > 18) });
// same as:
mustBe({ age: mustBe(Number, (num) => num > 18) });
not(...validations)
it negates the validations passed
import { mustBe, not } from "garn-validator";
// anything but Number
mustBe(not(Number))("qwerty"); // valid, return 'qwerty'
arrayOf()
As we use the array []
as enum, if you need to check the items of an array, you should treat it as an object and check against an schema.
import mustBe from "garn-validator";
mustBe(Array, { [/\d/]: Number })([1, 2, 3]); // returns [1, 2, 3]
mustBe(Array, { [/\d/]: Number })([1, 2, "3"]); // throws
In order to not be so ugly you can import arrayOf
from garn-validator as a shortcut to:
export const arrayOf = type => isValid(Array, {[/^\d$/]: type})
import mustBe, { arrayOf } from "garn-validator";
mustBe(arrayOf(Number))([1, 2, 3]); // returns [1, 2, 3]
mustBe(arrayOf(Number))([1, 2, "3"]); // throws
objectOf
You can import objectOf
from garn-validator as a shortcut to:
export const objectOf = type => isValid(Object, {[/./]: type})
import mustBe, { objectOf } from "garn-validator";
mustBe(objectOf(Number))({ a: 1, b: 2 }); // returns { a: 1, b: 2 }
mustBe(objectOf(Number))({ a: 1, b: "2" }); // throws
There are six types of validations: Primitives, Constructors, RegExp, Enums, Schemas and Custom functions
Checking a primitive is a === comparison
Anything that is not and object in JS is a primitive: Number
, String
, undefined
, null
and Symbol
mustBe(1)(1); // returns 1 --> 1 === 1
mustBe("1")(1); // throws, '1' !== 1
mustBe(1n)(1); // throws, 1n !== 1
mustBe(undefined)(null); // throws, undefined !== null
// keep in mind than a symbol is only equal to itself
let s = Symbol();
mustBe(s)(s); // returns s
mustBe(s)(Symbol()); // throws
Checking against a constructor means to know if the value evaluated has been created from that constructor
mustBe(Number)(2); // (2).constructor === Number --> true
mustBe(Symbol)(Symbol()); // ok
A valid constructor is a class
or any built-in constructor.
class Car {}
let honda = new Car();
mustBe(Car)(honda); // honda.constructor === Car --> true
You can't use a normal function used as constructor from the old JS times.
function Car(name) {
this.name = name;
}
let honda = new Car("honda");
mustBe(Car)(honda); // throws. Car is detected as custom validator function
All built in Constructors are supported
NOT YET WORKING IN DENO
In order to detect any Object (or Array) is a Proxy we intercept the creation of Proxies.
To have that functionality you must import "garn-validator/src/proxyDetection.js"
before any creation of Proxies you need to detect;
import "garn-validator/src/proxyDetection.js";
const target = { a: 1 };
const proxy = new Proxy(target, {
get: () => 33,
});
mustBe(Proxy)(proxy); // returns proxy
without running garn-validator/src/proxyDetection.js
// NO IMPORT
const target = { a: 1 };
const proxy = new Proxy(target, {
get: () => 33,
});
mustBe(Proxy)(proxy); // fails
The perfect validator to check strings. It does what you expect:
let isLowerCased = mustBe(/^[a-z]+$/);
isLowerCased("honda"); // /^[a-z]+$/.test('honda') --> true
// or building a regexp with the constructor RexExp;
mustBe(new RegExp(/^[a-z]+$/))("honda"); // true
Any function that is not a constructor is treated as custom validator.
It must return any truthy value in order to pass the validation.
mustBe((val) => val >= 0)(10); // returns 10
mustBe((val) => val >= 0)(-10); // throws
mustBe(() => "I am truthy")(10); // returns 10
mustBe(() => [])(10); // returns 10
To fail a validation may return a falsy value or throw an error.
If it returns a falsy value, the default error will be thrown: TypeValidationError
If it throws an error, that error will be thrown.
mustBe(() => false)(10); // throws TypeValidationError
mustBe(() => 0)(10); // throws TypeValidationError
mustBe(() => {
throw new RangeError("ups");
})(10); // throws RangeError
mustBe(() => {
throw "ups";
})(10); // throws 'ups'
Enums works as OR operator. Must be an array which represent all options.
let cities = ["valencia", "new york", "salzburg"];
mustBe(cities)("valencia"); // returns "valencia"
mustBe(cities)("madrid"); // throws
But it's much more powerful than checking against primitives. It can contain any type of validator.
It checks every item until one passes.
let isNumberOrBigInt = [Number, BigInt]; // must be Number or BigInt
mustBe(isNumberOrBigInt)(1n); // returns 1n
mustBe(isNumberOrBigInt)(1); // returns 1
let isFalsy = [0, "", null, undefined, false];
mustBe(isFalsy)(""); // returns ""
let isNumberAlike = [Number, (val) => val === Number(val)];
mustBe(isNumberAlike)(1n); // returns 1n
mustBe(isNumberAlike)(1); // returns 1
mustBe(isNumberAlike)("1"); // returns "1"
An Schema is just a plain object telling in each key which validation must pass.
let schema = {
name: String, // required and be a Number
age: (age) => age > 18, // required and be a greater than 18
tel: [Number, String], // required and be Number or String
role: ["admin", "user"], // required and be 'admin' or 'user'
credentials: {
// must be and object and will be validate with this "subSchema"
pass: String,
email: String,
},
};
let obj = {
name: "garn",
age: 20,
tel: "+34617819234",
role: "admin",
credentials: {
pass: "1234",
email: "[email protected]",
},
};
mustBe(schema)(obj); // returns obj
Only the keys in the schema will be checked. Any key not present in the schema won't be checked (under consideration to be changed)
mustBe({})({ a: 1 }); // returns { a: 1 } , a is not in the schema
And optional key must be undefined
, null
, or pass the validation
mustBe({ x$: Number })({ x: 1 }); // returns { x: 1 }, x is present and is Number
mustBe({ x$: String })({ x: 1 }); // it throws, x is present but is not String
mustBe({ x$: String })({}); // returns {}, x is undefined
mustBe({ x$: String })({ x: undefined }); // returns { x: undefined }, x is undefined
mustBe({ x$: String })({ x: null }); // returns { x: null }, x is null
You can use key$
or 'key?'
. It would be nicer to have key?
without quotes but is not valid JS
mustBe({ "x?": String })({}); // returns {}
You can validate multiple keys at once using a regexp key
mustBe({
[/./]: String,
})({
a: "a",
b: "b",
}); // ok
// or write it as plain string
mustBe({
"/./": String,
})({
a: "a",
b: 1, // fails
}); // throws
// only checks the keys that matches regex
mustBe({
[/^[a-z]+$/]: Number,
})({
x: 1,
y: 2,
z: 3,
CONSTANT: "foo", // not checked
}); // ok, all lowercased keys are numbers
The required keys and optional won't be check against a regexp key
mustBe({
[/./]: Number,
x: String, // this required key has priority against regex key
})({
x: "x", // not checked as Number, checked as String
}); // ok, x is String
mustBe({
[/./]: Number,
x: String,
})({
x: "x", // not checked as Number, checked as String
y: "y", // checked as Number, fails
}); // throw
mustBe({
[/./]: Number,
$x: String,
y: String,
})({
x: "x", // not checked as Number, checked as String
y: "y", // checked as String
z: "z", // checked as Number, fails
}); // throw
This feature is perfect to note that any key not specified in schema is not allowed
mustBe({
x: String,
[/./]: () => false,
})({
x: "x",
y: "y", // fails
});
When using a custom validator inside an schema will be run with 3 arguments: (value, root, keyName) => {}
- value: the value present in that key from the object
- root: the whole object, not matter how deep the validation occurs
- keyName: the name of the key to be checked.
// against root obj
mustBe({
max: (val, root, keyName) => val > root.min,
min: (val, root, keyName) => val < root.max,
})({
max: 1,
min: -1,
}); // ok
mustBe({
max: (val, root, keyName) => val > root.min,
min: (val, root, keyName) => val < root.max,
})({
max: 10,
min: 50,
}); // it throws
// all key must be at least 3 characters
mustBe({
[/./]: (val, root, keyName) => keyName.length > 3,
})({
max: 1, // key too short
longKey: 1, // valid key
}); // it throws, max key is too short
The validator constructor can receive as many validations as needed.
All will be checked until one fails
const isArrayOfLength2 = mustBe(Array, (array) => array.length === 2);
isArrayOfLength2([1, 2]); // returns [1, 2]
mustBe(
(v) => v > 0,
(v) => v < 50 // will fail
)(100); // it throws
const isValidPassword = mustBe(
String, // must be an String
(str) => str.length >= 8, // and its length must be at least 8
/[a-z]/, // and must have at least one lowercase
/[A-Z]/, // and must have at least one uppercase
/[0-9]/, // and must have at least one number
/[-_/!·$%&/()]/ // and must have at least one especial character
);
isValidPassword("12345wW-"); // returns "12345wW-"
isValidPassword("12345"); // fails
If a validation fails it will throw new TypeValidationError(meaningfulMessage)
which inherits from TypeError
. It can be imported.
If it throws an error from a custom validator, that error will be thrown.
import { mustBe, TypeValidationError } from "garn-validator";
try {
mustBe(Boolean)(33);
} catch (error) {
error instanceof TypeValidationError; // true
error instanceof TypeError; // true
}
try {
mustBe(() => {
throw "ups";
})(33);
} catch (error) {
error === "ups"; // true
}
try {
mustBe(() => {
throw new RangeError("out of range");
})(33);
} catch (error) {
error instanceof RangeError; // true
error instanceof TypeError; // false
}
There are 3 types a AggregateError
that can be thrown:
SchemaValidationError
: thrown when more than one key fails checking an schemaEnumValidationError
: thrown when all validations fails checking an enumSerieValidationError
: thrown when more than one validation fails checking an Serie
All of them inherits from AggregateError
and has a property errors with an array of all errors collected
try {
mustBeOrThrowAll(Number, String)(null);
} catch (error) {
error instanceof AggregateError; // true
console.log(error.errors);
/*
[
TypeValidationError: value null do not match constructor Number ,
TypeValidationError: value null do not match constructor String ,
]
*/
}
If using mustBeOrThrowAll more than one key fails checking an Schema , it will throw a SchemaValidationError with all Errors aggregated in error.errors.
If only one key fail it will throw only that Error (not an AggregateError)
SchemaValidationError inherits from AggregateError,
But if using
mustBe
only the first Error will be thrown.
// more than 2 keys fails
try {
mustBeOrThrowAll({ a: 1, b: 2 })({});
} catch (error) {
console.log(error instanceof SchemaValidationError); // true
console.log(error instanceof AggregateError); // true
console.log(error.errors.length); // 2
}
// only 1 key fails
try {
mustBeOrThrowAll({ a: 1 })({});
} catch (error) {
console.log(error instanceof TypeError); // true
console.log(error instanceof SchemaValidationError); // false
}
If all validations of an enum fails, it will throw a EnumValidationError with all Errors aggregated in error.errors
But if the length of the enum is 1, it will throw only that error.
EnumValidationError inherits from AggregateError.
try {
mustBe([Boolean, String])(1);
} catch (error) {
console.log(error instanceof EnumValidationError); // true
console.log(error instanceof AggregateError); // true
}
try {
mustBe([Boolean])(1);
} catch (error) {
console.log(error instanceof EnumValidationError); // false
console.log(error instanceof TypeError); // true
}
If using mustBeOrThrowAll fails all validations of a serie , it will throw a SerieValidationError with all Errors aggregated in error.errors
But if the length of the enum is 1. it will throw only this error.
SerieValidationError inherits from AggregateError.
try {
mustBeOrThrowAll(Boolean, String)(1);
} catch (error) {
console.log(error instanceof SerieValidationError); // true
console.log(error instanceof AggregateError); // true
}
try {
mustBeOrThrowAll(Boolean)(1);
} catch (error) {
console.log(error instanceof SerieValidationError); // false
console.log(error instanceof TypeError); // true
}
hasErrors
will flatMap all errors found. No AggregateError will be in the array returned.
hasErrors(/[a-z]/)("g"); // null
hasErrors(/[a-z]/, Number)("G");
/*
[
TypeValidationError: value "G" do not match regex /[a-z]/,
TypeValidationError: value "G" do not match constructor Number ,
]
*/
hasErrors({ a: Number, b: String })({ a: null, b: null });
/*
[
TypeValidationError: At path /a null do not match constructor Number,
TypeValidationError: At path /b null do not match constructor String
]
*/
All errors the library throws has the raw data collected in a property called raw
.
try {
mustBe({ a: Number })({ a: null });
} catch (error) {
console.log(error.raw);
}
/*
{
// the validation failing
type: [Function: Number],
// the value evaluated
value: null,
// the root object
root: { a: null },
// the key failing
keyName: 'a',
// the whole path where the evaluation happens as an array
path: [ 'a' ],
// the error message
message: 'At path /a null do not match constructor Number',
// the error constructor
'$Error': [class TypeValidationError extends TypeError],
// the behavior applied
behavior: {
collectAllErrors: false,
onValid: [Function: onValidDefault],
onInvalid: [Function: onInvalidDefault]
},
}
*/
You can create your own validators and use them as custom validation creating new ones.
const isPositive = mustBe((v) => v > 0);
const isNotBig = mustBe((v) => v < 100);
const isNumber = mustBe([Number, String], (num) => num == Number(num));
mustBe(isNumber, isPositive, isNotBig)("10"); // returns "10"
mustBe(isNumber, isPositive, isNotBig)(200); // it throws
When used inside another kind of behavior, it will inherit the behavior from where it has been used.
const isNotBig = isValidOrLog((v) => v < 100);
// its normal behavior
isNotBig(200); // false, logs '200 do not match validator (v) => v < 100'
isValid(isNotBig)(200); // false , and won't log
mustBe(isNotBig)(200); // fails , and won't log
hasErrors(isNotBig)(200); // array, won't log
/*
[
new TypeValidationError('200 do not match validator (v) => v < 100')
]
*/
Actually, it's not treated as a custom validation function. No matter is your are using hasErrors
which return null when nothing fails, and it's just works.
const isBigNumber = hasErrors(
[Number, String],
(num) => num == Number(num),
(num) => num > 1000
);
// its normal behavior
isBigNumber("a12");
/* [
new TypeValidationError(""a12" do not match validator (num) => num == Number(num)"),
new TypeValidationError(""a12" do not match validator num => num > 1000"),
];
*/
// inherit behavior
isValidOrLog(isBigNumber)("a12"); // false, and log only one error value "a10" do not match validator (num) => num == Number(num)
AsyncFunction
and GeneratorFunction
constructors are not in the global scope of any of the three JS environments (node, browser or deno). If you need to check an async function or a generator you can import them from garn-validator.
Note: Async functions and generators are not normal function, so it will fail against Function constructor
import mustBe, { AsyncFunction, GeneratorFunction } from "garn-validator";
mustBe(AsyncFunction)(async () => {}); // ok
mustBe(GeneratorFunction)(function* () {}); // ok
mustBe(Function)(function* () {}); // throws
mustBe(Function)(async function () {}); // throws
- Check value by constructor
- Enum type
- Shape type
- Custom validation with a function (value, root, keyName)
- Check RegEx
- Match object key by RegEx
- Multiples behaviors
- ArrayOf & objectOf
- Multiples validations
isValid(String, val => val.length > 3, /^[a-z]+$/ )('foo')
- Schema with optionals key
{ 'optionalKey?': Number }
or{ optionalKey$: Number }
- Setting for check all keys (no matter if it fails) and return (or throw) an array of errors
- Support for deno
- Support for browser
- Behavior applyDefaultsOnError. (syntax
mustBe(Number).or(0)
) - Async validation support
- More built-in utils functions