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FasterSchema (faster-schema NPM package)

FasterSchema validates JavaScript objects to ensure they match a schema. It can also clean the objects to automatically convert types, remove unsupported properties, and add automatic values such that the object is then more likely to pass validation. Note that this package is very new and the API might change.

This package is mainly meant as a limited, but faster alternative to SimpleSchema, with a very similar API. Here's a complete comparison. In short: the main difference is that this package doesn't support validating against mongoDB modifiers. But in return it is much faster for advanced scenarios. In our tests on an advanced schema with a large object, it is about ~20x faster for validation and ~50x faster for cleaning of data.

There are a lot of similar packages for validating objects. These are some of the features of this package that might be good reasons to choose this one over another:

  • Isomorphic. Works in NodeJS and modern (evergreen) browsers.
  • Powerful customizable error message system with decent English language defaults and support for localization, which makes it easy to drop this package in and display the validation error messages to end users.
  • Has hundreds of tests

For an even faster (about 2x faster) schema validator, have a look at the excellent superstruct package. However superstruct is less flexible in terms of data cleaning and schema composition. In the future we might also adapt the same compiler methodology as superstruct and get as fast, but it is not on the short term roadmap.

Table of Contents generated with DocToc

Installation

npm install faster-schema

NOTE: You may also need to load the babel-polyfill package if you get any errors related to missing ES6 functions in certain browsers.

Lingo

In this documentation:

  • "key", "field", and "property" generally all mean the same thing: an identifier for some part of an object that is validated by your schema. FasterSchema uses dot notation to identify nested keys.
  • "validate" means to check whether an object matches what you expect, for example, having the expected keys with the expected data types, expected string lengths, etc.

Quick Start

Validate an Object and Throw an Error

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

new FasterSchema({
  name: String,
}).validate({
  name: 2,
});

Validate an Array of Objects and Throw an Error

An error is thrown for the first invalid object found.

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

new FasterSchema({
  name: String,
}).validate([
  { name: 'Bill' },
  { name: 2 },
]);

Validate a Meteor Method Argument and Satisfy audit-argument-checks

To avoid errors about not checking all arguments when you are using FasterSchema to validate Meteor method arguments, you must pass check as an option when creating your FasterSchema instance.

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';
import { check } from 'meteor/check';
import { Meteor } from 'meteor/meteor';

FasterSchema.defineValidationErrorTransform(error => {
  const ddpError = new Meteor.Error(error.message);
  ddpError.error = 'validation-error';
  ddpError.details = error.details;
  return ddpError;
});

const myMethodObjArgSchema = new FasterSchema({ name: String }, { check });

Meteor.methods({
  myMethod(obj) {
    myMethodObjArgSchema.validate(obj);

    // Now do other method stuff knowing that obj satisfies the schema
  },
});

Validate an Object and Get the Errors

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const validationContext = new FasterSchema({
  name: String,
}).newContext();

validationContext.validate({
  name: 2,
});

console.log(validationContext.isValid());
console.log(validationContext.validationErrors());

Automatically Clean the Object Before Validating It

TO DO

Set Default Cleaning Options

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const mySchema = new FasterSchema({
  name: String,
}, {
  clean: {
    filter: true,
    autoConvert: true,
    removeEmptyStrings: true,
    trimStrings: true,
    getAutoValues: true,
    removeNullsFromArrays: true,
  },
});

Explicitly Clean an Object

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const mySchema = new FasterSchema({ name: String });
const doc = { name: 123 };
const cleanDoc = mySchema.clean(doc);
// cleanDoc is now mutated to hopefully have a better chance of passing validation
console.log(typeof cleanDoc.name); // string

Defining a Schema

Let's get into some more details about the different syntaxes that are supported when defining a schema. It's probably best to start with the simplest syntax. Here's an example:

Shorthand Definitions

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  name: String,
  age: 'number?', // => optional
  matrix: [[Number]],
});

This is referred to as "shorthand" syntax. You simply map a property name to a type. When validating, FasterSchema will make sure that all of those properties are present and are set to a value of that type. For optional fields, you can use string notation of the types ending with '?'. Array (even multi dimensional) shorthands is illustrated by the matrix property.

Longhand Definitions

In many cases, you will need to use longhand in order to define additional rules beyond what the data type should be.

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  name: {
    type: String,
    max: 40,
  },
  age: {
    type: Number,
    optional: true,
  },
  registered: {
    type: Boolean,
    defaultValue: false,
  },
});

Mixing Shorthand with Longhand

You can use any combination of shorthand and longhand:

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  name: 'string?',
  age: {
    type: Number,
    optional: true,
  },
  matrix: {
    type: [['number']]
  }
});

More Shorthand

If you set the schema key to a regular expression, then the type will be String and the string must match the provided regular expression.

For example, this:

{
  exp: /foo/
}

is equivalent to:

{
  exp: { type: String, regEx: /foo/ }
}

You can also set the schema key to an array of some type:

{
  friends: [String],
}

is equivalent to:

{
  friends: { type: Array },
  'friends.$': { type: String },
}

Extending Schemas

If there are certain fields that are repeated in many of your schemas, it can be useful to define a FasterSchema instance just for those fields and then merge them into other schemas:

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';
import { idSchema, addressSchema } from './sharedSchemas';

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  name: String,
});
schema.extend(idSchema);
schema.extend(addressSchema);

Overriding When Extending

If the key appears in both schemas, the definition will be extended such that the result is the combination of both definitions.

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';
import { idSchema, addressSchema } from './sharedSchemas';

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  name: {
    type: String,
    min: 5,
  },
});
schema.extend({
  name: {
    type: String,
    max: 15,
  },
});

The above will result in the definition of the name field becoming:

{
  name: {
    type: String,
    min: 5,
    max: 15,
  },
}

Note also that a plain object was passed to extend. If you pass a plain object, it is converted to a FasterSchema instance for you.

Merging schemas

You can also merge multiple schemas together

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';
import { idSchema, addressSchema } from './sharedSchemas';

const schema = FasterSchema.merge([
  idSchema,
  addressSchema,
  {
    name: String,
  }
]);

Subschemas / Schema composition

Similar to extending, you can also reference other schemas as a way to define objects that occur within the main object:

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';
import { addressSchema } from './sharedSchemas';

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  name: String,
  homeAddress: addressSchema,
  billingAddress: {
    type: addressSchema,
    optional: true,
  },
});

Extracting Schemas

Sometimes you have one large FasterSchema object, and you need just a subset of it for some purpose.

To pull out certain schema keys into a new schema, you can use the pick method:

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  firstName: String,
  lastName: String,
  username: String,
  address: Object,
  'address.street': String,
  'address.zip': Number
});

const nameSchema = schema.pick('firstName', 'lastName', 'address.*');

Use the wildcard to select an element and all it's children.

To keep all but certain keys in a new schema, you can use the omit method:

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  firstName: String,
  lastName: String,
  username: String,
});

const nameSchema = schema.omit('username');

To pull a subschema out of an Object key in a larger schema, you can use getObjectSchema:

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  firstName: String,
  lastName: String,
  address: Object,
  'address.street1': String,
  'address.street2': { type: String, optional: true },
  'address.city': String,
  'address.state': String,
  'address.postalCode': String,
});

const addressSchema = schema.getObjectSchema('address');

// addressSchema is now the same as this:
// new FasterSchema({
//   street1: String,
//   street2: { type: String, optional: true },
//   city: String,
//   state: String,
//   postalCode: String,
// });

Schema Keys

A basic schema key is just the name of the key (property) to expect in the objects that will be validated.

Use string keys with MongoDB-style dot notation to validate nested arrays and objects. For example:

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  mailingAddress: Object,
  'mailingAddress.street': String,
  'mailingAddress.city': String,
});

To indicate array items, use a $:

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  addresses: {
    type: Array,
    minCount: 1,
    maxCount: 4
  },
  'addresses.$': Object,
  'addresses.$.street': String,
  'addresses.$.city': String,
});

Schema Rules

Here are some specifics about the various rules you can define in your schema.

type

One of the following:

  • String
  • Number
  • Boolean
  • Object
  • Array
  • Any custom or built-in class like Date
  • Another FasterSchema instance, meaning Object type with this schema

label

Can also be a function that returns the label

A string that will be used to refer to this field in validation error messages. The default is an inflected (humanized) derivation of the key name itself. For example, the key "firstName" will have a default label of "First name" if you do not include the label property in your definition.

You can use the labels function to alter one or more labels on the fly:

schema.labels({
  password: "Enter your password"
});

To get the label for a field, use schema.label(fieldName), which returns a usable string.

optional

By default, all keys are required. Set optional: true to change that.

With complex keys, it might be difficult to understand what "required" means. Here's a brief explanation of how requiredness is interpreted:

  • If type is Array, then "required" means that key must have a value, but an empty array is fine. (If an empty array is not fine, add the minCount: 1 option.)
  • For array items (when the key name ends with ".$"), the optional option has no effect. That is, something cannot be "required" to be in an array.
  • If a key is required at a deeper level, the key must have a value only if the object it belongs to is present.

That last point can be confusing, so let's look at a couple examples:

  • Say you have a required key "friends.address.city" but "friends.address" is optional. If "friends.address" is set in the object you're validating, but "friends.address.city" is not, there is a validation error. However, if "friends.address" is not set, then there is no validation error for "friends.address.city" because the object it belongs to is not present.
  • If you have a required key "friends.$.name", but the friends array has no objects in the object you are validating, there is no validation error for "friends.$.name". When the friends array does have objects, every present object is validated, and each object could potentially have a validation error if it is missing the name property. For example, when there are two objects in the friends array and both are missing the name property, there will be a validation error for both "friends.0.name" and "friends.1.name".

required

If you would rather have all your schema keys be optional by default, pass the requiredByDefault: false option and then use required: true to make individual keys required.

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  optionalProp: String,
  requiredProp: { type: String, required: true },
}, { requiredByDefault: false });

min/max

  • If type is Number, these rules define the minimum or maximum numeric value.
  • If type is String, these rules define the minimum or maximum string length.
  • If type is Date, these rules define the minimum or maximum date, inclusive.

You can alternatively provide a function that takes no arguments and returns the appropriate minimum or maximum value. This is useful, for example, if the minimum Date for a field should be "today".

exclusiveMin/exclusiveMax

Set to true to indicate that the range of numeric values, as set by min/max, are to be treated as an exclusive range. Set to false (default) to treat ranges as inclusive.

minCount/maxCount

Define the minimum or maximum array length. Used only when type is Array.

allowedValues

An array of values that are allowed. A key will be invalid if its value is not one of these.

You can use schema.getAllowedValuesForKey(key) to get the allowed values array for a key.

regEx

Any regular expression that must be matched for the key to be valid, or an array of regular expressions that will be tested in order.

The FasterSchema.RegEx object defines standard regular expressions you can use as the value for the regEx key.

  • FasterSchema.RegEx.Email for emails (uses a permissive regEx recommended by W3C, which most browsers use. Does not require a TLD)
  • FasterSchema.RegEx.EmailWithTLD for emails that must have the TLD portion (.com, etc.). Emails like me@localhost and [email protected] won't pass this one.
  • FasterSchema.RegEx.Domain for external domains and the domain only (requires a tld like .com)
  • FasterSchema.RegEx.WeakDomain for less strict domains and IPv4 and IPv6
  • FasterSchema.RegEx.IP for IPv4 or IPv6
  • FasterSchema.RegEx.IPv4 for just IPv4
  • FasterSchema.RegEx.IPv6 for just IPv6
  • FasterSchema.RegEx.Url for http, https and ftp urls
  • FasterSchema.RegEx.Id for IDs generated by Random.id() of the random package, also usable to validate a relation id.
  • FasterSchema.RegEx.ZipCode for 5- and 9-digit ZIP codes
  • FasterSchema.RegEx.Phone for phone numbers (taken from Google's libphonenumber library)

blackbox

If you have a key with type Object or Array, the properties will be validated as well, so you must define all allowed properties in the schema. If this is not possible or you don't care to validate these properties, use the blackbox: true option to skip validation for everything within the object/array.

trim

Used by the cleaning process but not by validation

When you call fasterSchemaInstance.clean() with trimStrings set to true, all string values are trimmed of leading and trailing whitespace. If you set trim to false for certain keys in their schema definition, those keys will be skipped.

custom

Refer to the Custom Validation section.

defaultValue

Used by the cleaning process but not by validation

Set this to any value that you want to be used as the default when an object does not include this field or has this field set to undefined. This value will be injected into the object by a call to myFasterSchema.clean() with getAutovalues: true.

Note the following points of confusion:

  • A default value itself is not cleaned. So, for example, if your default value is "", it will not be removed by the removeEmptyStrings operation in the cleaning.
  • A default value is added only if there isn't a value set AND the parent object exists. Usually this is what you want, but if you need to ensure that it will always be added, you can add defaultValue: {} to all ancestor objects.

If you need more control, use the autoValue option instead.

To get the defaultValue for a field, use schema.defaultValue(fieldName). It is a shorthand for schema.get(fieldName, 'defaultValue').

autoValue

Used by the cleaning process but not by validation

The autoValue option allows you to specify a function that is called by fasterSchemaInstance.clean() to potentially change the value of a property in the object being cleaned. This is a powerful feature that allows you to set up either forced values or default values, potentially based on the values of other fields in the object.

If an autoValue function does not return anything (i.e., returns undefined), the field will be deleted.

Any other return value will be used as the field's value.

The only argument an autoValue function received is an object containing the following keys:

  • isSet: True if the field is already set in the document
  • value: If isSet = true, this contains the field's current (requested) value in the document.
  • path: The path in the object to clean, e.g. object.array.0.subarray.1.field
  • genericPath: The generic path in the object to clean, e.g. object.array.$.subarray.$.field
  • rootObj: The complete object being cleaned (in the current state of being cleaned)
  • parentObj: The parent object of this field (in the current state of being cleaned)
  • getValue(): Use this method to get the cleaned value of another field, you can pass a path, e.g. object.array.0.subarray.1.field
  • getSiblingValue(): Use this method to get the cleaned value of a sibling field

Getting field properties

To obtain field's property value, just call get method.

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  friends: {
    type: Array,
    minCount: 0,
    maxCount: 3,
  }
});

schema.get('friends', 'maxCount'); // 3

Validating Data

Ways to Perform Validation

There are three ways to validate an object against your schema:

  1. With a throwaway context, throwing an Error for the first validation error found (schema.validate())
  2. With a unique unnamed validation context, not throwing any Errors (schema.newContext().validate())
  3. With a unique named validation context, not throwing any Errors (schema.namedContext('someUniqueString').validate())
  4. With the default validation context, not throwing any Errors. (schema.namedContext().validate())

A validation context provides reactive methods for validating and checking the validation status of a particular object.

Named Validation Contexts

Here is an example of obtaining a named validation context:

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  name: String,
});

const userFormValidationContext = schema.namedContext('userForm');

The first time you request a context with a certain name, it is created. Calling namedContext() passing no arguments is equivalent to calling namedContext('default').

Unnamed Validation Contexts

To obtain an unnamed validation context, call newContext():

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  name: String,
});

const myValidationContext = schema.newContext();

An unnamed validation context is not persisted anywhere.

Validating an Object

To validate an object against the schema in a validation context, call validationContextInstance.validate(obj, options). This method returns true if the object is valid according to the schema or false if it is not. It also stores a list of invalid fields and corresponding error messages in the context object.

You can call myContext.isValid() to see if the object last passed into validate() was found to be valid.

For a list of options, see the Validation Options section.

Validating Only Some Keys in an Object

You may have the need to (re)validate certain keys while leaving any errors for other keys unchanged. For example, if you have several errors on a form and you want to revalidate only the invalid field the user is currently typing in. For this situation, call myContext.validate with the keys option set to an array of keys that should be validated.

This method returns true only if all the specified schema keys and their descendent keys are valid according to the schema. Otherwise it returns false.

Validation Options

validate() accepts the following options:

  • ignore: An array of validation error types (in FasterSchema.ErrorTypes enum) to ignore.
  • keys: An array of keys to validate. If not provided, revalidates the entire object.

Validating and Throwing ValidationErrors

  • Call myFasterSchema.validate(obj, options) to validate obj against the schema and throw a ValidationError if invalid.
  • Call FasterSchema.validate(obj, schema, options) static function as a shortcut for myFasterSchema.validate if you don't want to create myFasterSchema first. The schema argument can be just the schema object, in which case it will be passed to the FasterSchema constructor for you. This is like check(obj, schema) but without the check dependency and with the ability to pass full schema error details back to a callback on the client.
  • Call myFasterSchema.validator() to get a function that calls myFasterSchema.validate for whatever object is passed to it. This means you can do validate: myFasterSchema.validator() in the mdg:validated-method package.

Customize the Error That is Thrown

You can defineValidationErrorTransform one time somewhere in your code to customize the error or change it to a more specific type.

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

FasterSchema.defineValidationErrorTransform(error => {
  const customError = new MyCustomErrorType(error.message);
  customError.errorList = error.details;
  return customError;
});

For example, in a Meteor app, in order to ensure that the error details are sent back to the client when throwing an error in a server method, you can convert it to a Meteor.Error:

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

FasterSchema.defineValidationErrorTransform(error => {
  const ddpError = new Meteor.Error(error.message);
  ddpError.error = 'validation-error';
  ddpError.details = error.details;
  return ddpError;
});

Custom Field Validation

There are three ways to attach custom validation methods.

To add a custom validation function that is called for ALL keys in ALL schemas (for example, to publish a package that adds global support for some additional rule):

FasterSchema.addValidator(myFunction);

To add a custom validation function that is called for ALL keys for ONE schema:

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const schema = new FasterSchema({ ... });
schema.addValidator(myFunction);

To add a custom validation function that is called for ONE key in ONE schema:

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  someKey: {
    type: String,
    custom: myFunction,
  }
});

All custom validation functions work the same way. First, do the necessary custom validation, use this to get whatever information you need. Then, if valid, return undefined. If invalid, return an error type string. The error type string can be one of the built-in strings or any string you want.

  • If you return a built-in string, it's best to use the FasterSchema.ErrorTypes constants.
  • If you return a custom string, you'll usually want to define a message for it.

The custom validator receives an object as first parameter containing:

  • path: The name of the schema path (e.g., "addresses.0.street")
  • genericPath: The generic name of the schema key (e.g., "addresses.$.street")
  • definition: The schema definition object.
  • rootObj: The complete object to validate
  • parentObj: The current field's parent object, useful to get siblin values
  • value: The value to validate

Custom Whole-Document Validators

Add a validator for all schemas:

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

FasterSchema.addDocValidator(obj => {
  // Must return an array, potentially empty, of objects with `name` and `type` string properties and optional `value` property.
  return [
    { name: 'firstName', type: 'TOO_SILLY', value: 'Reepicheep' }
  ];
});

Add a validator for one schema:

import FasterSchema from 'faster-schema';

const schema = new FasterSchema({ ... });
schema.addDocValidator(obj => {
  // Must return an array, potentially empty, of objects with `name` and `type` string properties and optional `value` property.
  return [
    { name: 'firstName', type: 'TOO_SILLY', value: 'Reepicheep' }
  ];
});

Manually Adding a Validation Error

If you want to display an arbitrary validation error and it is not possible to use a custom validation function (perhaps you have to call a function onSubmit or wait for asynchronous results), you can add one or more errors to a validation context at any time by calling myContext.addValidationErrors(errors), where errors is an array of error objects with the following format:

{name: key, type: errorType, value: anyValue}
  • name: The schema key as specified in the schema.
  • type: The type of error. Any string you want, or one of the strings in the FasterSchema.ErrorTypes list.
  • value: Optional. The value that was not valid. Will be used to replace the [value] placeholder in error messages.

If you use a custom string for type, be sure to define a message for it. (See Customizing Validation Messages).

Example:

FasterSchema.setDefaultMessages({
  messages: {
    en: {
      customError({label, value}){ return `Wrong value: ${value} for field ${label}` },
    },
  },
});

myValidationContext.addValidationErrors([{ name: 'myField', label: 'MyField', value: 'foo' type: 'customError' }]);

Getting a List of Invalid Keys and Validation Error Messages

Call myValidationContext.validationErrors() to get the full array of validation errors. Each object in the array has at least two keys:

  • name: The schema key as specified in the schema.
  • type: The type of error. See FasterSchema.ErrorTypes.

There may also be a value property, which is the value that was invalid.

There may be a message property, but usually the error message is constructed from message templates. You should call ctxt.keyErrorMessage(key) to get a reactive message string rather than using error.message directly.

Customizing Validation Messages

In most cases you probably want to set default messages to be used by all FasterSchema instances. Example:

FasterSchema.setDefaultMessages({
  messages: {
    en: {
      "too_long"({label}){ return `${label} is too long!` },
    },
  },
});

Other Validation Context Methods

myContext.keyIsInvalid(key) returns true if the specified key is currently invalid, or false if it is valid. This is a reactive method.

myContext.keyErrorMessage(key) returns the error message for the specified key if it is invalid. If it is valid, this method returns an empty string. This is a reactive method.

Call myContext.reset() if you need to reset the validation context, clearing out any invalid field messages and making it valid.

Other FasterSchema Methods

Call MySchema.schema([key]) to get the schema definition object. If you specify a key, then only the schema definition for that key is returned.

Note that this may not match exactly what you passed into the FasterSchema constructor. The schema definition object is normalized internally, and this method returns the normalized copy.

Cleaning Objects

You can call fasterSchemaInstance.clean() or fasterSchemaValidationContextInstance.clean() to clean the object you're validating. Do this prior to validating it to avoid any avoidable validation errors.

The clean function takes the object to be cleaned as its first argument and the following optional options as its second argument:

  • mutate: The object is copied before being cleaned. If you don't mind mutating the object you are cleaning, you can pass mutate: true to get better performance.
  • filter: true by default. If true, removes any keys not explicitly or implicitly allowed by the schema, which prevents errors being thrown for those keys during validation.
  • autoConvert: true by default. If true, helps eliminate unnecessary validation messages by automatically converting values where possible.
    • Non-string values are converted to a String if the schema expects a String
    • Strings that are numbers are converted to Numbers if the schema expects a Number
    • Strings that are "true" or "false" are converted to Boolean if the schema expects a Boolean
    • Numbers are converted to Boolean if the schema expects a Boolean, with 0 being false and all other numbers being true
    • Non-array values are converted to a one-item array if the schema expects an Array
  • removeEmptyStrings: Remove keys in normal object or $set where the value is an empty string? True by default.
  • trimStrings: Remove all leading and trailing spaces from string values? True by default.
  • getAutoValues: Run autoValue functions and inject automatic and defaultValue values? True by default.

You can also set defaults for any of these options in your FasterSchema constructor options:

const schema = new FasterSchema({
  name: String
}, {
  clean: {
    trimStrings: false,
  },
});

Dates

For consistency, if you care only about the date (year, month, date) portion and not the time, then use a Date object set to the desired date at midnight UTC (note, the clean function won't strip out time). This goes for min and max dates, too. If you care only about the date portion and you want to specify a minimum date, min should be set to midnight UTC on the minimum date (inclusive).

Following these rules ensures maximum interoperability with HTML5 date inputs and usually just makes sense.

Best Practice Code Examples

Make a field conditionally required

If you have a field that should be required only in certain circumstances, first make the field optional, and then use a custom function similar to this:

{
  field: {
    type: String,
    optional: true,
    custom: function ({value, isSet, parentObj}) {
      let shouldBeRequired = parentObj.saleType === 1;
      if (shouldBeRequired) {
        if (!isSet || value === null || value === "") return FasterSchema.ErrorTypes.REQUIRED;
      }
    }
  }
}

Where customCondition is whatever should trigger it being required.

Validate one key against another

Here's an example of declaring one value valid or invalid based on another value using a custom validation function.

FasterSchema.setDefaultMessages({
  messages: {
    en: {
      passwordMismatch(){ return 'Passwords do not match' },
    },
  },
});

const MySchema = new FasterSchema({
  password: {
    type: String,
    label: "Enter a password",
    min: 8,
  },
  confirmPassword: {
    type: String,
    label: "Enter the password again",
    min: 8,
    custom({ value, parentObj }) {
      if (value !== parentObj.password) {
        return "passwordMismatch";
      }
    },
  },
});

License

MIT

Contributing

Anyone is welcome to contribute. Before submitting a pull request, make sure that you've added tests for your changes, and that all tests pass when you run npm test.

Thanks

(Add your name if it's missing.)

  • @aldeed for the simple schema package, which this package is based off.

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Partial, but faster alternative for simple schema

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