node-filter

0.0.1 • Public • Published

Usage

var filter = require('filter')

Validation

// Synchronous
try {
  filter.validate('hello', 'string', {'min': 10})
  console.log('Valid')
} catch (e) {
  console.log('Invalid', e.message) // → "Invalid", "too short"
}

// Asynchronous
filter.validate('hello', 'string', {'min': 10}, function(err, value) {
  if (!err) {
    console.log('Valid')
  } else {
    console.log('Invalid', err.message) // → "Invalid", "too short"
  }
})

Sanitization

// Synchronous
try {
  console.log(filter.sanitize('hello', 'string', {'min': 10})) // → "hello     "
} catch (e) {
  console.log('Failed')
}

// Asynchronous
filter.sanitize('hello', 'string', {'min': 10}, function(err, value, original) {
  if (err) {
    console.log('Failed')
  } else {
    console.log(value) // → "hello     "
  }
})

Help

filter.help('string')

will output:

Help for filter string:
|    Standard string validations
| Options:
|  * min: Minimum length (default value = 0)
|  * max: Maximum length (default value = null)
|  * pattern: Regexp that should be matched (default value = null)
|  * replace: Replacement for given pattern, used for sanitization only (default value = null)

Available filters

noop

This filter just does nothing. It always validates, and sanitization always returns original value.

This filter takes no option.

string

This filter will be used to validate and cleanup strings.

Available options:

  • min: Minimum length (default value = 0)
  • max: Maximum length (default value = null)
  • pattern: Regexp that should be matched (default value = null)
  • replace: Replacement for given pattern, used for sanitization only (default value = null)

email

TODO

url

TODO

number

TODO

Add your own filters

Create a filter

The simpliest way is to declare your filter as a module:

module.exports = {
  description: "Description of your filter, used by help()", // Optional
  validate:    function(value, options) { /* Throws an error if value is not valid. Optionnally returns sanitized value */ },
  sanitize:    function(value, options) { /* Returns sanitized value */ }, // Optional, if not present 'validate' will be used
  options:     {
    my_option: { description: "Description of this option, used by help()", default: default_value },
    …
  }
}

How options work

Suppose you declared your filter this way:

{
  validate: function() { return true; /* this filter does not make validations */ },
  sanitize: function(value, options) { return value + options.added },
  options:  { added: { default: 0 } }
}

It will be used this way:

var filter = require('filter')
console.log(filter.sanitize(3, {added: 4})) // → 7

Note:

  • Calling a filter with options it did not declare will raise an error.
  • If an option is not provided, your callback will get its default value (null if none was specified).

Use your filter

You can add your filter directly:

filter.add('my_filter', { … })

If you wrote it as a module, you can use the module's name:

filter.add('my_filter', './my_filter_module')

But you could prefer to let the filters declare themselves:

  • Create a module named enabled_filters in current working directory.
  • This module will return a list of your own filters, format { name: filter }.

For example, you could have this structure:

./
 +- app.js
 +- enabled_filters.js → module.exports = { my_filter: './my_custom_filter' }
 +- my_custom_filter.js → module.exports = { … }

This way, no need to call filter.add(…), it's automatically done when module filter is loaded.

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npm i node-filter

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Version

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  • naholyr