Simple validations for node and the browser.
npm install checkitA DOM-independent validation library for Node.js, io.js and the browser.
It supports both sync
It allows you to seamlessly validate full javascript objects, defining custom messages, labels, and validations, with full support for asynchronous validations with promises. It supports conditional validations, and has powerful, consistent error structuring and utility methods for manipulating your errors' output any way you can imagine.
``js
var mainRules = Checkit(rules);
mainRules
.run(obj)
.then(function(validatedFields) {
console.log('The fields: ' + _.keys(validatedFields).join(', ') + ' were validated!');
})
.caught(Checkit.Error, function(err) {
$("#errors").html(err.map(function(val, key) {
return '
#### Node.js
`
npm install checkit
`#### Browser
The easiest way to use the library is with webpack or browserify
API:
$3
The main
Checkit constructor may be called with or without the new keyword, taking a hash of fields/rules for these fields to be validated.#### Options:
##### language
Used to specify the default language key for using a particular language file, currently en, es, ru and fr are supported.
##### labels
Specifies labels for use in error messages for specific keys
##### messages
Adds specific messages for individual errors
#### Example:
$3
$3
`js
var checkit = new Checkit({
firstName: 'required',
lastName: 'required',
email: ['required', 'email']
});var body = {
email: 'test@example.com',
firstName: 'Tim',
lastName: 'Griesser',
githubUsername: 'tgriesser'
};
checkit.run(body).then(function(validated) {
console.log(validated);
}).catch(Checkit.Error, function(err) {
console.log(err.toJSON());
})
`$3
$3
`js
var checkit = new Checkit({
firstName: 'required',
lastName: 'required',
email: ['required', 'email']
});var body = {
email: 'test@example.com',
firstName: 'Tim',
lastName: 'Griesser',
githubUsername: 'tgriesser'
};
var [err, validated] = checkit.validateSync(body)
// ...
`$3
`js
Checkit.check('email', email, ['required', 'validEmail'])
.catch(function(err) {
console.log(err.message)
});
`$3
`js
// ES6...
var [err, resp] = Checkit.checkSync('email', email, ['required', 'validEmail']) if (err) {
} else {
// ...
}
`Available Validators
Validation Name
Description
accepted
The value must be yes, on, or 1. This is useful for validating "Terms of Service" acceptance.
alpha
The value must be entirely alphabetic characters.
alphaDash
The value may have alpha-numeric characters, as well as dashes and underscores.
alphaNumeric
The value must be entirely alpha-numeric characters.
alphaUnderscore
The value must be entirely alpha-numeric, with underscores but not dashes.
arguments
The value must be
a javascript "arguments" object.
array
The value must be
a valid array object.
base64
The value must be a base64 encoded value.
between:min:max
The value must have a size between the given min and max.
boolean
The value must be a javascript boolean.
contains:value
The value must contain the value. For a string, it does an "indexOf" check, an array "_.indexOf" and for an object "_.has".
date
The value must be a valid date object.
different:fieldName
The given field must be different than the fieldName under validation.
email
The field must be a valid formatted e-mail address.
empty
The value under validation must be empty; either an empty string, an empty, array, empty object, or a falsy value.
exactLength:value
The field must have the exact length of "val".
exists
The value under validation must not be undefined.
finite
The value under validation must be a finite number.
function
The value under validation must be a function.
greaterThan:value
The value under validation must be "greater than" the given value.
greaterThanEqualTo:value
The value under validation must be "greater than" or "equal to" the given value.
integer
The value must have an integer value.
ipv4
The value must be formatted as an IPv4 address.
ipv6
The value must be formatted as an IPv6 address.
lessThan:value
The value must be "less than" the specified value.
lessThanEqualTo:value
The value must be "less than" or "equal to" the specified value.
luhn
The given value must pass a basic luhn (credit card) check regular expression.
matchesField:fieldName
The value must exactly match the value of another fieldName under validation.
max:value
The value must be less than a maximum value. Strings, numerics, and files are evaluated in the same fashion as the size rule.
maxLength:value
The value must have a length property which is less than or equal to the specified value. Note, this may be used with both arrays and strings.
min:value
The value must have a minimum value. Strings, numerics, and files are evaluated in the same fashion as the size rule.
minLength:value
The value must have a length property which is greater than or equal to the specified value. Note, this may be used with both arrays and strings.
NaN
The value must be NaN.
natural
The value must be a natural number (a number greater than or equal to 0).
naturalNonZero
The value must be a natural number, greater than or equal to 1.
null
The value must be null.
number
The value must be a javascript Number.
numeric
The value must have a numeric value.
object
The value must pass an _.isObject check.
plainObject
The value must be an object literal.
regExp
The value must be a javascript RegExp object.
required
The value must be present in the input data.
string
The value must be a string type.
url
The value must be formatted as an URL.
uuid
Passes for a validly formatted UUID.
Conditional Validations
Sometimes you may wish to require a given field conditionally, for example require a field only if another field has a greater value than 100. Or you may need two fields to have a given value only when another field is present. Adding these validation rules doens't have to be a pain. First, create a
Checkit instance with the main rules that never change:`js
var checkit = new Checkit({
firstName: ['required'],
lastName: ['required'],
email: ['required', 'email']
});
`Then use the
maybe method to add additional rules:$3
The first of the
maybe method is the hash of validation fields / settings, similar to the main Checkit object. The second argument is a function, evaluated with the object being validated, and if it returns explicitly true or with a promise fulfilling with true, it will add an additional validator to the Checkit object.This method makes building complex conditional validations a snap.
`js
// In this example, the "authorBio" field is only required if there are
// more than 5 books specified in the input object
checkit.maybe({authorBio: ['required', 'max:500']}, function(input) {
return input.books > 5;
});
`Advanced & Custom Validators:
First, and simplest, you can specify a function on the validation array for a property. For example:
`js
{
email: ['email', function(val) {
return knex('accounts').where('email', '=', val).then(function(resp) {
if (resp.length > 0) throw new Error('The email address is already in use.')
})
}]
}
`You may also specify an object in one of the validator slots, specifying at the minimum a rule, and optionally params, label, and message.
`js
{
email: {
rule: 'email',
label: 'Email'
},
first_name: [{
rule: 'required',
message: 'You must supply a first name value!!'
}, {
rule: 'minLength:3',
label: 'first name of this application'
}],
arr: {
rule: 'contains',
params: [10] // Number => Different behavior than "contains:10"
}
}
`You may also use the
context parameter passed to run when using a function on the validation array of a property. This can be particularly useful if your validation function needs to execute within a transaction:`js
{
email: {
rule: function(val, params, context){
var query = knex('users');
if (context && context.transacting){
query.transacting(context.transacting);
} return query.where('email', '=', val)
.andWhere('id', '<>', this.target.id)
.then(function(resp){
if (resp.length > 0){
throw new Error('The email address is already in use.');
}
});
}
}
}
`Second, you may add a custom validator to the
Checkit.Validator object's prototype, returning a boolean value or a promise.`js
Checkit.Validator.prototype.unused = function(val, table, column) {
return knex(table).where(column, '=', val).andWhere('id', '<>', this._target.id).then(function(resp) {
if (resp.length > 0) {
throw new Error('The ' + table + '.' + column + ' field is already in use.');
}
});
}{
email: ['email', 'unused:accounts:email']
}
`Checkit Errors
One of the main features of
Checkit is the error handling; By extending the error object with utility methods from underscore, the errors are even easier to work with.- Checkit.Error
- Checkit.FieldError
- Checkit.ValidationError
$3
The main Error object,
Checkit.Error is returned from the has several helper methods & properties, as well as a number of utility methods:#### .errors
The "errors" property of a
Checkit.Error object is a hash of errors for each of the fields which are considered "invalid" in any way by the validation rules. The keys in this hash are the invalid fields, and the values are Checkit.FieldError objects, which in-turn have an errors attribute, an array containing errors for each failed rule.#### .get(key)
The
get method returns the Checkit.FieldError object for a specific key, or undefined if one does not exist.#### .toString([flat])
Useful for debugging, the
toString method converts the Checkit error into a human readable representation of the failed validation. If the flat argument is passed as a "truthy" value, it will output only the first ValidationError in the FieldError; otherwise it will output each validation message in a comma separated string.#### .toJSON()
Converts the current error object to a json representation of the error, for easy use/refinement elsewhere. For other methods, such as map, reduce, each, see the utility methods section.
$3
A
FieldError is an error that contains all of the sub-errors for the validation of an individual item in the validated hash.#### fieldError.errors
The
errors property of a FieldError is$3
A
ValidationError is the result of an individual error in the field rule.$3
The following methods are underscore methods proxied to the
Checkit.Error and Checkit.FieldError objects, for easy manipulation of the .errors object contained in each.##### shared (Checkit.Error & FieldError)
- each
- forEach
- map
- reduce
- reduceRight
- find
- filter
- reject
- invoke
- toArray
- size
- shuffle
##### Checkit.Error only
- keys
- values
- pairs
- invert
- pick
- omit
##### Checkit.FieldError only
Other Helpers
$3
The
Checkit.labelTransform method takes a function that receives the field name and returns a human-readable label for use in error messages.
Change Log
$3
- Expect a global
Promise instance. Breaking change #69
- Add meaningful message for integer validation. #46
- Add string validation. #58
- Compatible with Lodash 4.x only. #55
- More permissive email regex. #61, #68
- Only bundle required lodash methods. #69$3
- Separate codepath for server (bluebird) and client (when.js)
- Add French and Russian translations.
- Allow new longer top level domains in emails.
$3
- Minor bugfixes
$3
- Major internal refactoring, using when.js to shave bytes in the browser build.
- Added sync api with runSync / checkSync / validateSync
- Alias
validate for run$3
-
CheckIt is now renamed Checkit
- Flipped the validations and target arguments, so the syntax is now Checkit(validations).run(input) rather than Checkit(input).run(validations)`, allowing for re-use of the validation objects.Initial release