Sindre Sorhus
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readme.md
Function argument validation for humans
Highlights
- Expressive chainable API
- Lots of built-in validations
- Supports custom validations
- Automatic label inference in Node.js
- Written in TypeScript
Install
$ npm install ow
Usage
import ow from 'ow';
const unicorn = input => {
ow(input, ow.string.minLength(5));
// …
};
unicorn(3);
//=> ArgumentError: Expected `input` to be of type `string` but received type `number`
unicorn('yo');
//=> ArgumentError: Expected string `input` to have a minimum length of `5`, got `yo`
API
ow(value, predicate)
Test if value
matches the provided predicate
. Throws an ArgumentError
if the test fails.
ow(value, label, predicate)
Test if value
matches the provided predicate
. Throws an ArgumentError
with the specified label
if the test fails.
The label
is automatically inferred in Node.js but you can override it by passing in a value for label
. The automatic label inference doesn't work in the browser.
ow.isValid(value, predicate)
Returns true
if the value matches the predicate, otherwise returns false
.
ow.create(predicate)
Create a reusable validator.
const checkPassword = ow.create(ow.string.minLength(6));
const password = 'foo';
checkPassword(password);
//=> ArgumentError: Expected string `password` to have a minimum length of `6`, got `foo`
ow.create(label, predicate)
Create a reusable validator with a specific label
.
const checkPassword = ow.create('password', ow.string.minLength(6));
checkPassword('foo');
//=> ArgumentError: Expected string `password` to have a minimum length of `6`, got `foo`
ow.any(...predicate[])
Returns a predicate that verifies if the value matches at least one of the given predicates.
ow('foo', ow.any(ow.string.maxLength(3), ow.number));
ow.{type}
All the below types return a predicate. Every predicate has some extra operators that you can use to test the value even more fine-grained.
Primitives
Built-in types
Typed arrays
int8Array
uint8Array
uint8ClampedArray
int16Array
uint16Array
int32Array
uint32Array
float32Array
float64Array
Structured data
Miscellaneous
Predicates
The following predicates are available on every type.
not
Inverts the following predicate.
ow(1, ow.number.not.infinite);
ow('', ow.string.not.empty);
//=> ArgumentError: [NOT] Expected string to be empty, got ``
is(fn)
Use a custom validation function. Return true
if the value matches the validation, return false
if it doesn't.
ow(1, ow.number.is(x => x < 10));
ow(1, ow.number.is(x => x > 10));
//=> ArgumentError: Expected `1` to pass custom validation function
Instead of returning false
, you can also return a custom error message which results in a failure.
const greaterThan = (max: number, x: number) => {
return x > max || `Expected \`${x}\` to be greater than \`${max}\``;
};
ow(5, ow.number.is(x => greaterThan(10, x)));
//=> ArgumentError: Expected `5` to be greater than `10`
Maintainers
Related
- @sindresorhus/is - Type check values
- ngx-ow - Angular form validation on steroids
License
MIT