Package Exports
- path-parser
- path-parser/modules/Path
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 (path-parser) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
path-parser
A small utility to parse and build paths. It can be used to partially or fully match paths against a defined pattern.
Partial match allows to determine if a given path starts with the defined pattern. It is used by route-node
Usage
var Path = require('path-parser');
// Defining a new path
var p = new Path('/users/profile/:id');
// Matching
p.match('/users/profile/00123') // => {id: "00123"}
// Partial matching: does this path
// starts with that pattern?
p.partialMatch('/users/profile/00123/orders') // => {id: "00123"}
p.partialMatch('/profile/00123/orders') // => null
// Building
p.build({id: '00123'}) // => "users/profile/00123"
Defining parameters
:param
: for URL parameters;param
: for matrix parameters*splat
: for parameters spanning over multiple segments. Handle with care?param1¶m2
or?:param1&:param2
: for query parameters. Colons:
are optional
Parameter constraints
For URL parameters and matrix parameters, you can add a constraint in the form of a regular expression. Note that back slashes have to be escaped.
:param<\\d+>
will match numbers only for parameterparam
;id<[a-fA-F0-9]{8}
will match 8 characters hexadecimal strings for parameterid
Constraints are also applied when building paths, unless specified otherwise (set option flag ignoreConstraints
to true).
// Path.build(params, opts)
var Path = new Path('/users/profile/:id<\d+>');
path.build({id: 'not-a-number'}); // => Will throw an error
path.build({id: 'not-a-number'}, {ignoreConstraints: true}); // => '/users/profile/not-a-number'
Optional trailing slashes
When using .match()
or .partialMatch()
, you can path a second argument. If truthy, it will make trailing slashes optional.
var path = new Path('/my-path');
path.match('/my-path/') // => null
path.match('/my-path/', true) // => {}