Package Exports
- @decs/typeschema
- @decs/typeschema/dist/index.js
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (@decs/typeschema) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
Many libraries rely on some sort of type validation. Their maintainers have the choice of either to:
- Implement their own validation logic: which leads to more code to maintain, and we already have many good solutions out there (e.g. zod, arktype, typia)
- Couple their code with a specific validation library: which limits adoption by developers who use another
- Support multiple validation libraries: which is a burden to keep up-to-date (tRPC picked this one)
There's no best validation library because there's always a tradeoff. Each developer chooses the library that makes the most sense to them. TypeSchema solves this problem by easily providing option 3: support multiple validation libraries out-of-the-box.
Features
- 🚀 Decouple your code from validation libraries
- 🍃 Tiny client footprint, zero dependencies
- ✨ Easy-to-use, minimal API
Setup
Install TypeSchema with your package manager of choice:
| npm | npm install @decs/typeschema |
|---|---|
| Yarn | yarn add @decs/typeschema |
| pnpm | pnpm add @decs/typeschema |
Usage
import type {Infer, Schema} from '@decs/typeschema';
import {assert, validate} from '@decs/typeschema';
// Use your favorite validation library, e.g. `zod`, `arktype`, `typia`
const schema: Schema<string> = z.string();
const schema: Schema<string> = type('string');
const schema: Schema<string> = typia.createAssert<string>();
// Extracts the schema type
type Type = Infer<typeof schema>; // `string`
// Returns the validated data or throws a `ValidationIssue`
await assert(schema, '123'); // '123'
await assert(schema, 123); // Throws `ValidationIssue`
// Returns the validated data or a list of `ValidationIssue`s
await validate(schema, '123'); // {data: '123'}
await validate(schema, 123); // {issues: [`ValidationIssue`]}API
Types
Schema<T>
Generic interface for schemas
An union of the schema types of all supported validation librariesInfer<TSchema>
Extracts the equivalent TypeScript type of a schemaValidationIssue
Generic interface for validation issues
Includes amessage: stringand an optionalpath?: Array<string | number | symbol>
Functions
assert<T>(schema: Schema<T>, data: unknown): Promise<T>
Returns the validated data or throws aValidationIssuevalidate<T>(schema: Schema<T>, data: unknown): Promise<{data: T} | {issues: Array<ValidationIssue>}>
Returns the validated data or a list ofValidationIssues
Coverage
| Project | Popularity | Example schema | Support |
|---|---|---|---|
| zod | z.string() |
✅ | |
| yup | string() |
✅ | |
| joi | Joi.string() |
✅ | |
| superstruct | string() |
✅ | |
| io-ts | t.string |
❌ | |
| ow | ow.string |
❌ | |
| typebox | Type.String() |
✅ | |
| typia | typia.createAssert<string>() |
✅ | |
| runtypes | String |
✅ | |
| arktype | type('string') |
✅ |
Custom validations are also supported:
export function assertString(data: unknown): string {
if (typeof data !== 'string') {
throw new Error('Expected a string, got: ' + data);
}
return data;
}
await assert(assertString, '123'); // '123'
await assert(assertString, 123); // Throws `ValidationIssue`
await validate(assertString, '123'); // {data: '123'}
await validate(assertString, 123); // {issues: [`ValidationIssue`]}Acknowledgements
- Inspired by tRPC's input & output validators
- Adapter architecture inspired by @ecyrbe's suggestions
- API definition inspired by @colinhacks's proposal