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validate.it.js

Simple way to validate

Installation

install from npmjs

npm install --save validate.it.js

and import in preffered style

import validate from 'validate.it.js';
const validate = require('validate.it.js');

Or just download last version from releases page and add script tag in end of body

<script src="/validate.it.js"></script>

validate variable will be in global scope

Usage

Give him a string and call needed asserts

validate('Pa$$w0rd')
  .hasLettersLatin()
  .hasNumbers()
  .has("!", "@", "#", "$", "%", "^", "&", "*", "(", ")", "_", "+");
// -->
{
  ok: true,
  base: 'Pa$$w0rd',
  asserts: ['hasLettersLatin', 'hasNumbers', 'has'],
  errors: []
}
validate('bob')
  .hasLettersLatin()
  .hasNumbers();
// -->
{
  ok: false,
  base: 'bob',
  asserts: ['hasLettersLatin', 'hasNumbers'],
  errors: [
    {
      path: [],
      rule: 'hasNumbers',
      details: {
        string: 'bob',
        subStrings: ["1","2","3","4","5","6","7","8","9","0"],
        found: false,
        message: '"bob" has no numbers'
      }
    }
  ]
}

API

validation - is a function of single argument called base. It returns result described below. Result has methods called asserts, which returns mutated result - so you can call chains of asserts. Like

result = validation( base )
  .assert()
  .anotherAssert( argument )
  .yetAnotherAssert( set, of, arguments );

Note

Asserts combined in AND logic way. So if any of asserts fails - validation fails.

  • Result - result of validation in clean readable format.
  • Assert - step of validation process. It checks base by specified rule.
  • .extend - static method allows you to add your own asserts.

Result

result is just an object with params:

  • ok bool - status of validation
    • true - validation passed
    • false - validation fails
  • base string|varios - basis for validation
    • right now validate.it works only with simple string bases. But if you know why and how to use it with other types of values - we can implement it.
  • asserts array - called asserts names in call order
  • errors array - Validation Reports for failed asserts

simpliest result you can get by calling validation without any assert

validate('')
// -->
{
  ok: true,
  base: '',
  asserts: [],
  errors: []
}

Validation Report

"Unified validation report interface" - @rumkin / Validation Report . git

This is a DTO used as error objects in errors array. Every VR contains:

  • path array - empty array []
  • rule string - name of assert
  • details object - object with non-stardartized params describes reason of failure.
    • details.message string - enduser oriented error description.

Example

{
  path: [],
  rule: 'hasNumbers',
  details: {
    string: 'bob',
    subStrings: ["1","2","3","4","5","6","7","8","9","0"],
    found: false,
    message: '"bob" has no numbers'
  }
}

Asserts

.has

Check that any subString present in base.

Syntax:

.has( subString [, subString2...] )

Fail details:

{
    string: base,
    subStrings: [subString, subString2...],
    found: false,
    message: 'not any of ["subString", "subString2"...] found in "base"'
}

Examples:

validate('abc123').has('a').ok === true;
validate('abc123').has('c1','e4').ok === true;

validate('abc123').has('d').ok === false;
validate('abc123').has('e2','e4').ok === false;

.hasNo

Check that any subString unpresent in base.

Syntax:

.hasNo( subString [, subString2...] )

Fail details:

{
    string: base,
    subStrings: [subString, subString2...],
    found: true,
    message: 'every of ["subString", "subString2"...] found in "base"'
}

Examples:

validate('abc123').has('e').ok === true;
validate('abc123').has('c1','e4').ok === true;

validate('abc123').has('b').ok === false;
validate('abc123').has('a','b','c').ok === false;

.hasNumbers

Check that any number present in base.

Syntax:

.hasNumbers()

Fail details:

{
    string: base,
    subStrings: ["1","2","3","4","5","6","7","8","9","0"],
    found: false,
    message: '"base" has no numbers'
}

Examples:

validate('abc123').hasNumbers().ok === true;

validate('abc').hasNumbers().ok === false;

.hasLettersLatin

Check that any latin letter present in base.

Syntax:

.hasLettersLatin()

Fail details:

{
    string: base,
    subStrings: ["a","b","c", ... "X","Y","Z"],
    found: false,
    message: '"base" has no latin letters'
}

Examples:

validate('abc123').hasLettersLatin().ok === true;

validate('123').hasLettersLatin().ok === false;

.match

Check base for matching any regexp.

Syntax:

.match( regexp [, regexp2...] )

Fail details:

{
    string: base,
    patterns: ['pattern', 'pattern2'...],
    match: false,
    message: '"base" don\'t match any of ["pattern", "pattern2"...]'
}

Examples:

validate('abc123').match(/\d/).ok === true;
validate('abc123').match(/^a.*3$/).ok === true;

validate('abc123').match(/\s/).ok === false;
validate('abc123').match(/\s/, /def456/).ok === false;

.eval

Calls function assert with base as only argument. Fails if it returns something. Syntax:

.eval( assert )

Any return of assert (except of undefined) will be converted into details object and wrapped with Validation Report. Simple strings will be placed as .message property:

'no smiles found' -> {mesage: 'no smiles found'}

other results will be converted as is:

{a: 1, b: '2'} -> {a: 1, b: '2'}

[1, 2, 3] -> {0: 1, 1: 2, 2: 3}

true -> {}

Function -> {}

Examples:

validate('abc123').eval(() => {}).ok === true;
validate('abc123').eval(base => base === ':)' : 'found you' ? undefined).ok === true;

validate('abc123').eval(() => true).ok === false;
validate('abc123').eval(() => 'some text').errors[0].details;
// -->
{
  message: 'some text'
}
validate('abc123').eval(() => {some: 'text'}).errors[0].details;
// -->
{
  some: 'text'
}

Extend

Static method allows you to add your own asserts. It adds assert to list of asserts by name. Syntax:

validation.extend( name, assert );

assert is function with same behaviour as it in .eval( assert ). It should return nothing (undefined) if assert pass and any other value otherwise.

One powerfull difference - it can take arguments besides base Example:

validate.extend('hasSmile', (base, australian) => {
    const smiles = [':)', ':(', ';)'];
    const australianSmiles = ['(:', '):', '(;'];
    const checkSmiles = australian ? australianSmiles : smiles;
    const smileFound = checkSmiles.some(smile => base.includes(smile));
    if (smileFound)
        return;
    
    return `no smiles in "${base}"`;
});
validate('hello :)').hasSmile().ok === true;
validate('hello (:').hasSmile(true).ok === true;

validate('hello').hasSmile().ok === false;
validate('hello').hasSmile().errors[0].details;
// -->
{
  message: 'no smiles in "hello"'
}

Psst.. Do not use it a lot. Contribute instead!

Contribute

You know another usefull assert? Fill free to pull request here.

Check the Contributers guide

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simple way to validate

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