Package Exports
- @poppinss/utils
- @poppinss/utils/build
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 (@poppinss/utils) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme

Utils
Collection of reusable scripts used by AdonisJS core team
This module exports a collection of re-usable utilties to avoid re-writing the same code in every other package. We also include a handful of Lodash utilities, which are used across the AdonisJS packages eco-system.
Version 3.0 breaking changes
The version 3.0 re-format the exports to expose an "helpers" subpath to be used within the AdonisJS apps as well.
The idea is to separate helpers that we need to share with AdonisJS core inside its own module, accessible as @poppinss/utils/build/helpers.
Inside helpers subpath
Following modules are now moved to a subpath.
MessageBuilderbase64composefsReadAllinterpolaterequireAllresolveDirresolveFrom
// Earlier
import {
MessageBuilder,
base64,
compose,
fsReadAll,
interpolate,
requireAll,
resolveDir,
resolveFrom,
safeEqual
} from '@poppinss/utils'
// After version 3.0
import {
MessageBuilder,
base64,
compose,
fsReadAll,
interpolate,
requireAll,
resolveDir,
resolveFrom,
safeEqual
} from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
randomString
The randomString is now part of the string helpers.
// Earlier
import { randomString } from '@poppinss/utils'
randomString(32)
// After version 3.0
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.generateRandom(32)lodash
The following lodash functions have been removed with new alternatives.
snakeCasecamelCasestartCase
// Earlier
import { lodash } from '@poppinss/utils'
lodash.snakeCase()
lodash.camelCase()
lodash.startCase()
// After version 3.0
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.snakeCase()
string.camelCase()
string.titleCase()Table of contents
- Installation
- Exception
- esmRequire
- esmResolver
- Lodash utilities
- Safe stringify
- Safe parse
- defineStaticProperty
- Helpers
Installation
Install the package from npm registry as follows:
npm i @poppinss/utils
# yarn
yarn add @poppinss/utilsand then use it as follows:
import { requireAll } from '@poppinss/utils'
requireAll(__dirname)Exception
A custom exception class that extends the Error class to add support for defining status and error codes.
import { Exception } from '@poppinss/utils'
throw new Exception('Something went wrong', 500, 'E_RUNTIME_EXCEPTION')
throw new Exception('Route not found', 404, 'E_ROUTE_NOT_FOUND')esmRequire
Utility to require script files wihtout worrying about CommonJs and ESM exports. This is how it works.
- Returns the exported value for
module.exports. - Returns the default value is an ESM module has
export default. - Returns all exports if is an ESM module and doesn't have
export default.
foo.js
module.exports = {
greeting: 'Hello world',
}foo.default.js
export default {
greeting: 'Hello world',
}foo.esm.js
export const greeting = {
greeting: 'hello world',
}import { esmRequire } from '@poppinss/utils'
esmRequire('./foo.js') // { greeting: 'hello world' }
esmRequire('./foo.default.js') // { greeting: 'hello world' }
esmRequire('./foo.esm.js') // { greeting: { greeting: 'hello world' } }esmResolver
The esmResolver method works similar to esmRequire. However, instead of requiring the file, it accepts the object and returns the exported as per the same logic defined above.
import { esmRequire } from '@poppinss/utils'
esmResolver({ greeting: 'hello world' }) // { greeting: 'hello world' }
esmResolver({
default: { greeting: 'hello world' },
__esModule: true,
}) // { greeting: 'hello world' }
esmResolver({
greeting: { greeting: 'hello world' },
__esModule: true,
}) // { greeting: { greeting: 'hello world' } }Lodash utilities
Lodash itself is a bulky library and most of the times, we don't need all the functions from it.
Also, all of the lodash functions are published as individual modules on npm. However, most of those individual packages are outdated and using them is not an option.
Instead, we decided to use the lodash-cli to create a custom build for all the utilities we need inside AdonisJS ecosystem and export it as part of this package.
import { lodash } from '@poppinss/utils'
lodash.get({ name: 'virk' }, 'name') // virkExported methods
Following is the list of exported helpers.
Safe stringify
Similar to JSON.stringify, but also handles Circular references by removing them.
import { safeStringify } from '@poppinss/utils'
const o = { b: 1, a: 0 }
o.o = o
console.log(safeStringify(o))
// { "b":1,"a":0 }
console.log(JSON.stringify(o))
// TypeError: Converting circular structure to JSONSafe parse
Similar to JSON.parse, but protects against Prototype Poisoning
import { safeParse } from '@poppinss/utils'
const input = '{ "user": { "__proto__": { "isAdmin": true } } }'
JSON.parse(input)
// { user: { __proto__: { isAdmin: true } } }
safeParse(input)
// { user: {} }defineStaticProperty
Explicitly define static properties on a class by checking for hasOwnProperty. In case of inheritance, the properties from the parent class are cloned vs following the prototypal inheritance.
We use/need this copy from parent class behavior a lot in AdonisJS. Here's an example of Lucid models
You create an application wide base model
class AppModel extends BaseModel {
@column.datetime()
public createdAt: DateTime
}AdonisJS will create the $columnDefinitions property on the AppModel class, that holds all the columns
AppModel.$columnDefinitions // { createdAt: { columName: created_at } }Now, lets create another model inheriting the AppModel
class User extends AppModel {
@column()
public id: number
}As per the Javascript prototypal inheritance. The User model will not contain the columns from the AppModel, because we just re-defined the $columnDefinitions property. However, we don't want this behavior and instead want to copy the columns from the AppModel and then add new columns to it.
Voila! Use the defineStaticProperty helper from this class.
class LucidBaseModel {
static boot() {
defineStaticProperty(this, LucidBaseModel, {
propertyName: '$columnDefinitions',
defaultValue: {},
strategy: 'inherit',
})
}
}The defineStaticProperty takes a total of three arguments.
- The first argument is always
this. - The second argument is the root level base class. This will usually be the class exported by your package or module.
- The third argument takes the
propertyName,defaultValue (in case, there is nothing to copy), and thestrategy. - The
inheritstrategy will copy the properties from the base class. - The
definestrategy will always use thedefaultValueto define the property on the class. In other words, there is no copy behavior, but prototypal inheritance chain is also breaked by explicitly re-defining the property.
Helpers
The helpers module is also available in AdonisJS applications as follows:
import { fsReadAll, string, types } from '@ioc:Adonis/Core/Helpers'The @poppinss/utils exposes this module as follows
import { fsReadAll, string, types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'fsReadAll
A utility to recursively read all script files for a given directory. This method is equivalent to
readdir + recursive + filter (.js, .json, .ts).
import { fsReadAll } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
const files = fsReadAll(__dirname) // array of stringsYou can also define your custom filter function. The filter function must return true for files to be included.
const files = fsReadAll(__dirname, (file) => {
return file.endsWith('.foo.js')
})requireAll
Same as fsReadAll, but instead require the files. Helpful when you want to load all the config files inside a directory on app boot.
import { requireAll } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
const config = requireAll(join(__dirname, 'config'))
{
file1: {}, // exported object
file2: {} // exported object
}resolveFrom
Works similar to require.resolve, however it handles the absolute paths properly.
import { resolveFrom } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
resolveFrom(__dirname, 'npm-package') // returns path to package "main" file
resolveFrom(__dirname, './foo.js') // returns path to `foo.js` (if exists)
resolveFrom(__dirname, join(__dirname, './foo.js')) // returns path to `foo.js` (if exists)resolveDir
The require.resolve or resolveFrom method can only resolve paths to a given file and not the directory. For example: If you pass path to a directory, then it will search for index.js inside it and in case of a package, it will be search for main entry point.
On the other hand, the resolveDir method can also resolve path to directories using following resolution.
- Absolute paths are returned as it is.
- Relative paths starting with
./or.\are resolved usingpath.join. - Path to packages inside
node_modulesare resolved as follows: - Usesrequire.resolveto resolve thepackage.jsonfile. - Then replace thepackage-namewith the absolute resolved package path.
import { resolveDir } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
resolveDir(__dirname, './database/migrations')
// __dirname + /database/migrations
resolveDir(__dirname, 'some-package/database/migrations')
// {path-to-package}/database/migrations
resolveDir(__dirname, '@some/package/database/migrations')
// {path-to-package}/database/migrationsinterpolate
A small utility function to interpolate values inside a string.
import { interpolate } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
interpolate('hello {{ username }}', {
username: 'virk'
})
interpolate('hello {{ users.0.username }}', {
users: [{ username: 'virk' }]
})If value is missing, it will be replaced with an 'undefined' string.
Use the \ to escape a mustache block from getting evaluated.
import { interpolate } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
interpolate('\\{{ username }} expression evaluates to {{ username }}', {
username: 'virk'
})
// Output: {{ username }} expression evaluates to virkBase 64 Encode/Decode
Following helpers for base64 encoding/decoding also exists.
encode
import { base64 } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
base64.encode('hello world')
base64.encode(Buffer.from('hello world', 'binary'))decode
import { base64 } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
base64.decode(base64.encode('hello world'))
base64.decode(base64.encode(Buffer.from('hello world', 'binary')), 'binary')urlEncode
Same as encode, but safe for URLS and Filenames
urlDecode
Same as decode, but decodes the urlEncode output values
Safe equal
Compares two values by avoid timing attack. Accepts any input that can be passed to Buffer.from
import { safeValue } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
if (safeValue('foo', 'foo')) {
}Message Builder
Message builder provides a sane API for stringifying objects similar to JSON.stringify but has a few advantages.
- It is safe from JSON poisoning vulnerability.
- You can define expiry and purpose for the encoding. The
verifymethod will respect these values.
The message builder alone may seem useless, since anyone can decode the object and change its expiry or purpose. However, you can generate an hash of the stringified object and verify the tampering by validating the hash. This is what AdonisJS does for cookies.
import { MessageBuilder } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
const builder = new MessageBuilder()
const encoded = builder.build({ username: 'virk' }, '1 hour', 'login')Now verify it
builder.verify(encoded) // returns null, no purpose defined
builder.verify(encoded, 'register') // returns null, purpose mismatch.
builder.verify(encoded, 'login') // return { username: 'virk' }compose
Javascript doesn't have a concept of inherting multiple classes together and neither does Typescript. However, the official documentation of Typescript does talks about the concept of mixins.
As per the Typescript docs, you can create and apply mixins as follows.
type Constructor = new (...args: any[]) => any
const UserWithEmail = <T extends Constructor>(superclass: T) => {
return class extends superclass {
public email: string
}
}
const UserWithPassword = <T extends Constructor>(superclass: T) => {
return class extends superclass {
public password: string
}
}
class BaseModel {}
class User extends UserWithPassword(UserWithEmail(BaseModel)) {}Mixins are close to a perfect way of inherting multiple classes. I recommend reading this article for same.
However, the syntax of applying multiple mixins is kind of ugly, as you have to apply mixins over mixins, creating a nested hierarchy as shown below.
UserWithAttributes(UserWithAge(UserWithPassword(UserWithEmail(BaseModel))))The compose method is a small utility to improve the syntax a bit.
import { compose } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
class User extends compose(
BaseModel,
UserWithPassword,
UserWithEmail,
UserWithAge,
UserWithAttributes
) {}Mixins gotchas
Typescript has an open issue related to the constructor arguments of the mixin class or the base class.
Typescript expects all classes used in the mixin chain to have a constructor with only one argument of ...args: any[]. For example: The following code will work fine at runtime, but the typescript compiler complains about it.
class BaseModel {
constructor(name: string) {}
}
const UserWithEmail = <T extends typeof BaseModel>(superclass: T) => {
return class extends superclass {
// ERROR: A mixin class must have a constructor with a single rest parameter of type 'any[]'.ts(2545)
public email: string
}
}
class User extends compose(BaseModel, UserWithEmail) {}You can work around this by overriding the constructor of the base class.
import { NormalizeConstructor, compose } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
const UserWithEmail = <T extends NormalizeConstructor<typeof BaseModel>>(superclass: T) => {
return class extends superclass {
public email: string
}
}string
The string module includes a bunch of helper methods to work with strings.
camelCase
Convert a string to its camelCase version.
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.camelCase('hello-world') // helloWorldsnakeCase
Convert a string to its snake_case version.
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.snakeCase('helloWorld') // hello_worlddashCase
Convert a string to its dash-case version. Optionally, you can also capitalize the first letter of each segment.
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.dashCase('helloWorld') // hello-world
string.dashCase('helloWorld', { capitalize: true }) // Hello-WorldpascalCase
Convert a string to its PascalCase version.
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.pascalCase('helloWorld') // HelloWorldcapitalCase
Capitalize a string
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.capitalCase('helloWorld') // Hello WorldsentenceCase
Convert string to a sentence
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.sentenceCase('hello-world') // Hello worlddotCase
Convert string to its dot.case version.
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.dotCase('hello-world') // hello.worldnoCase
Remove all sorts of casing
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.noCase('hello-world') // hello world
string.noCase('hello_world') // hello world
string.noCase('helloWorld') // hello worldtitleCase
Convert a sentence to title case
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.titleCase('Here is a fox') // Here Is a foxpluralize
Pluralize a word.
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.pluralize('box') // boxes
string.pluralize('i') // weYou can also define your own irregular rules using the string.defineIrregularRule method.
- The first argument is the singular variation
- The second argument is the plural variation
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.defineIrregularRule('auth', 'auth')
string.plural('auth') // authYou can also define your own uncountable rules using the string.defineUncountableRule method.
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.defineUncountableRule('login')
string.plural('login') // hometruncate
Truncate a string after a given number of characters
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.truncate(
'This is a very long, maybe not that long title',
12
) // This is a ve...By default, the string is truncated exactly after the given characters. However, you can instruct the method to wait for the words to complete.
string.truncate(
'This is a very long, maybe not that long title',
12,
{
completeWords: true
}
) // This is a very...Also, it is possible to customize the suffix.
string.truncate(
'This is a very long, maybe not that long title',
12,
{
completeWords: true,
suffix: ' <a href="/1"> Read more </a>',
}
) // This is a very <a href="/1"> Read more </a>excerpt
The excerpt method is same as the truncate method. However, it strips the HTML from the string.
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.excerpt(
'<p>This is a <strong>very long</strong>, maybe not that long title</p>',
12
) // This is a very...condenseWhitespace
Condense whitespaces from a given string. The method removes the whitespace from the left, right and multiple whitespace in between the words.
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.condenseWhitespace(' hello world ')
// hello worldescapeHTML
Escape HTML from the string
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.escapeHTML('<p> foo © bar </p>')
// <p> foo © bar </p>Additonally, you can also encode non-ascii symbols
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.escapeHTML(
'<p> foo © bar </p>',
{
encodeSymbols: true
}
)
// <p> foo © bar </p>encodeSymbols
Encode symbols. Checkout he for available options
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.encodeSymbols('foo © bar')
// foo © bartoSentence
Join an array of words with a separator.
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.toSentence([
'route',
'middleware',
'controller'
]) // route, middleware, and controller
string.toSentence([
'route',
'middleware'
]) // route and middlewareYou can also customize
separator: The value between two words except the last onepairSeparator: The value between the first and the last word. Used, only when there are two wordslastSeparator: The value between the second last and the last word. Used, only when there are more than two words
string.toSentence([
'route',
'middleware',
'controller'
], {
separator: '/ ',
lastSeparator: '/or '
}) // route/ middleware/or controllerprettyBytes
Convert bytes value to a human readable string. For options, recommend the bytes package.
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.prettyBytes(1024) // 1KB
string.prettyBytes(1024, { unitSeparator: ' ' }) // 1 KBtoBytes
Convert human readable string to bytes. This method is the opposite of the prettyBytes method.
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.toBytes('1KB') // 1024prettyMs
Convert time in milliseconds to a human readable string
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.prettyMs(60000) // 1min
string.prettyMs(60000, { long: true }) // 1 minutetoMs
Convert human readable string to milliseconds. This method is the opposite of the prettyMs method.
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.toMs('1min') // 60000ordinalize
Ordinalize a string or a number value
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.ordinalize(1) // 1st
string.ordinalize(99) // 99thgenerateRandom
Generate a cryptographically strong random string
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.generateRandom(32)isEmpty
Find if a value is empty. Also checks for empty strings with all whitespace
import { string } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
string.isEmpty('') // true
string.isEmpty(' ') // trueTypes
The types module allows distinguishing between different Javascript datatypes. The typeof returns the same type for many different values. For example:
typeof ({}) // object
typeof ([]) // object
typeof (null) // objectWHAT??? Yes, coz everything is an object in Javascript. To have better control, you can make use of the types.lookup method.
lookup
Returns a more accurate type for a given value.
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
types.lookup({}) // object
types.lookup([]) // array
types.lookup(Object.create(null)) // object
types.lookup(null) // null
types.lookup(function () {}) // function
types.lookup(class Foo {}) // class
types.lookup(new Map()) // mapisNull
Find if the given value is null
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
types.isNull(null)) // trueisBoolean
Find if the given value is a boolean
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
types.isBoolean(true)) // trueisBuffer
Find if the given value is a buffer
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
types.isBuffer(new Buffer())) // trueisNumber
Find if the given value is a number
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
types.isNumber(100)) // trueisString
Find if the given value is a string
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
types.isString('hello')) // trueisArguments
Find if the given value is an arguments object
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
function foo() {
types.isArguments(arguments)) // true
}isObject
Find if the given value is a plain object
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
types.isObject({})) // trueisDate
Find if the given value is a date object
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
types.isDate(new Date())) // trueisArray
Find if the given value is an array
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
types.isArray([1, 2, 3])) // trueisRegexp
Find if the given value is an regular expression
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
types.isRegexp(/[a-z]+/)) // trueisError
Find if the given value is an instance of the error object
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
import { Exception } from '@poppinss/utils'
types.isError(new Error('foo'))) // true
types.isError(new Exception('foo'))) // trueisFunction
Find if the given value is a function
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
types.isFunction(function foo() {})) // trueisClass
Find if the given value is a class constructor. Uses regex to distinguish between a function and a class.
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
class User {}
types.isClass(User) // true
types.isFunction(User) // trueisInteger
Find if the given value is an integer.
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
types.isInteger(22.00) // true
types.isInteger(22) // true
types.isInteger(-1) // true
types.isInteger(-1.00) // true
types.isInteger(22.10) // false
types.isInteger(.3) // false
types.isInteger(-.3) // falseisFloat
Find if the given value is an float number.
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
types.isFloat(22.10) // true
types.isFloat(-22.10) // true
types.isFloat(.3) // true
types.isFloat(-.3) // true
types.isFloat(22.00) // false
types.isFloat(-22.00) // false
types.isFloat(-22) // falseisDecimal
Find if the given value has a decimal. The value can be a string or a number. The number values are casted to a string by calling the toString() method on the value itself.
The string conversion is peformed to test the value against a regex. Since, there is no way to natively find a decimal value in Javascript.
import { types } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
types.isDecimal('22.10') // true
types.isDecimal(22.1) // true
types.isDecimal('-22.10') // true
types.isDecimal(-22.1) // true
types.isDecimal('.3') // true
types.isDecimal(0.3) // true
types.isDecimal('-.3') // true
types.isDecimal(-0.3) // true
types.isDecimal('22.00') // true
types.isDecimal(22.0) // false (gets converted to 22)
types.isDecimal('-22.00') // true
types.isDecimal(-22.0) // false (gets converted to -22)
types.isDecimal('22') // false
types.isDecimal(22) // false
types.isDecimal('0.0000000000001') // true
types.isDecimal(0.0000000000001) // false (gets converted to 1e-13)ObjectBuilder
A very simple class to conditionally builder an object. Quite often, I create a new object from an existing one and wants to avoid writing undefined values to it. For example
const obj = {
...(user.username ? { username: user.username } : {}),
...(user.id ? { id: user.id } : {}),
...(user.createdAt ? { createdAt: user.createdAt.toString() } : {}),
}Not only the above code is harder to write. It is performance issues as well, since we are destructuring too many objects.
To address this use case, you can make use of the ObjectBuilder class as follows
import { ObjectBuilder } from '@poppinss/utils/build/helpers'
const obj = new ObjectBuilder()
.add('username', user.username)
.add('id', user.id)
.add('createdAt', user.createdAt && user.createdAt.toString())
.value // returns the underlying objectThe add method ignores the value if its undefined. So it never gets added to the object at all. You can also ignore null properties by passing a boolean flag to the constructor.
new ObjectBuilder(true) // ignore null as well