TypeScript Declarative Validation. Decorate your class properties to validate them using Joi.
npm install joiful
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This lib allows you to apply Joi validation constraints on class properties, by using decorators.
This means you can combine your type schema and your validation schema in one go!
Calling Validator.validateAsClass() allows you to validate any object as if it were an instance of a given class.
npm add joiful reflect-metadata
Or
yarn add joiful reflect-metadata.
You must enable experimental decorators and metadata in your TypeScript configuration.
tsconfig.json
``json`
{
"compilerOptions": {
"emitDecoratorMetadata": true,
"experimentalDecorators": true
}
}
Ensure you import reflect-metadata as the first import in your application's entry point.
index.ts
`typescript
import 'reflect-metadata';
...
`
Then you can start using joiful like this.
`typescript
import * as jf from 'joiful';
class SignUp {
@jf.string().required()
username: string;
@jf
.string()
.required()
.min(8)
password: string;
@jf.date()
dateOfBirth: Date;
@jf.boolean().required()
subscribedToNewsletter: boolean;
}
const signUp = new SignUp();
signUp.username = 'rick.sanchez';
signUp.password = 'wubbalubbadubdub';
const { error } = jf.validate(signUp);
console.log(error); // Error will either be undefined or a standard joi validation error
`
Don't like creating instances of classes? Don't worry, you don't have to. You can validate a plain old javascript object as if it were an instance of a class.
`typescript
const signUp = {
username: 'rick.sanchez',
password: 'wubbalubbadubdub',
};
const result = jf.validateAsClass(signUp, SignUp);
`
Want to create your own shorthand versions of decorators? Simply create a function like below.
customDecorators.ts
`typescript
import * as jf from 'joiful';
const password = () =>
jf
.string()
.min(8)
.regex(/[a-z]/)
.regex(/[A-Z]/)
.regex(/[0-9]/)
.required();
`
changePassword.ts
`typescript
import { password } from './customDecorators';
class ChangePassword {
@password()
newPassword: string;
}
`
`typescript`
class SimpleTodoList {
@jf.array().items(joi => joi.string())
todos?: string[];
}
To validate an array of objects that have their own joiful validation:
`typescript
class Actor {
@string().required()
name!: string;
}
class Movie {
@string().required()
name!: string;
@array({ elementClass: Actor }).required()
actors!: Actor[];
}
`
To validate an object subproperty that has its own joiful validation:
`typescript
class Address {
@string()
line1?: string;
@string()
line2?: string;
@string().required()
city!: string;
@string().required()
state!: string;
@string().required()
country!: string;
}
class Contact {
@string().required()
name!: string;
@object().optional()
address?: Address;
}
`
The joiful API is designed to closely match the joi API. One exception is validating the length of a string, array, etc, which is performed using .exactLength(n) rather than .length(n)`. If you're familiar with the joi API, you should find joiful very easy to pickup.
If there's something you're not sure of you can see how it's done by looking at the unit tests. There is 100% coverage so most likely you'll find your scenario there. Otherwise feel free to open an issue.
Got an issue or a feature request? Log it.
Pull-requests are also very welcome.
- class-validator: usable in both Node.js and the browser. Mostly designed for validating string values. Can't validate plain objects, only class instances.
- joi-extract-type: provides native type extraction from Joi Schemas. Augments the Joi type definitions.
- typesafe-joi: automatically infers type information of validated objects, via the standard Joi schema API.