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Cleans & validates untrusted data, with TypeScript & Flow support

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cleaners

Build Status JavaScript Style Guide

Cleans & validates untrusted data, with TypeScript & Flow support

Do you ever read JSON data from the outside world? If you, you should probably clean & validate that data before you start using it. That can be a lot of work, so cleaners is here to help with:

  • Validation - Ensuring that the input data matches the expected format.
  • Cleaning - Inserting fallback values, parsing strings into Date objects, and so forth.
  • Typing - Automatically generating TypeScript & Flow types.

If features:

  • Zero external dependencies
  • 100% test coverage
  • 1K minified + gzip
  • Documentation

Installing

If you are using Deno, just import cleaners directly:

import { asString } from 'https://deno.land/x/cleaners/mod.ts'

If you are using Node, first install the package using npm i cleaners or yarn add cleaners, and then import it using either syntax:

// The oldschool way:
const { asString } = require('cleaners')

// Or using Node's new native module support:
import { asString } from 'cleaners'

Overview

See the documentation website for details, but here is a quick overview:

This library contains a collection of composable Cleaner functions. A cleaner function validates some incoming data, and either returns it with the proper type or throws an exception. Here are some simple examples:

import { asDate, asString } from 'cleaners'

asString('hey') // Returns 'hey'
asString(1) // TypeError: Expected a string
asDate('2020-02-20') // Returns a JavaScript Date object

To handle objects, arrays, and other nested data types, this library includes some helpers for combining Cleaner functions together:

import { asArray, asNumber, asObject, asOptional } from 'cleaners'

const asMessage = asObject({
  message: asString,
  title: asOptional(asString), // Optional string
  recipients: asArray(asString), // Array of strings
  replyCount: asOptional(asNumber, 0) // Number with default value
})

// Let's clean some network data:
try {
  const response = await fetch('https://message-api')
  const message = asMessage(await response.json())
} catch (error) {}

Thanks to our TypeScript & Flow support, the custom asMessage function above has a detailed return type. The means you will get the same error-checking & auto-completion as if you had entered the following type declaration by hand:

interface Message {
  text: string
  title: string | undefined
  recipients: string[]
  replyCount: number
}

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