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treetorn

A JavaScript package that helps you enforce data strucutre consistency and write "schemas" by example.

Installation

npm install treetorn --save

You may instead just want to use treetorn for testing:

npm install treetorn --save-dev

Examples

Compare two data structures that are equivalent:

import compare from 'treetorn';

let a = {
	cities: [
		{ name: 'San Francisco', nicknames: ['SF', 'the city'], id: 0 },
		{ name: 'Orlando', nicknames: ['O-town', 'The city beautiful'], id: 1 }
	],
	people: [
		{ name: 'Reid', hometown: 1, current_home: 0 },
		{ name: 'Joe', hometown: 2, current_home: 2 }
	]
}

let b = {
	cities: [
		{ name: 'Sun Valley', nicknames: ['A great place to ski'], id: 0 },
		{ name: 'San Francisco', nicknames: ['SF', 'the city'], id: 1 }
	],
	people: [ { name: 'Piper', hometown: 0, current_home: 1 } ]
}

compare(a, b);
// returns { passes: true, err: undefined }

Compare two data structures that have a small difference:

let oops = {
	cities: [
		{ name: 'San Francisco', nicknames: ['SF', 'the city'], id: 0 },
		// oops, here id is a list but should be a scalar
		{ name: 'Orlando', nicknames: ['O-town', 'The city beautiful'], id: [] }
		],
	people: [
		{ name: 'Reid', hometown: 1, current_home: 0 },
		{ name: 'Joe', hometown: 2, current_home: 2 }
	]
}

compare(b, oops);
// returns { passes: false, err: '0 is a leaf but [] is not' }

Philosophy and detail

Treetorn doesn't diff two object trees, instead it determines whether they're equivalent, with a few assumptions built in.

Objects and Maps are treated as dictionaries

object.constructor === Object // if true, object is treated as a dictionary

This includes object literals like:

let object = {whoami: 'an object but really a dictionary'};
object.constructor === Object // returns true

Map objects are treated as dictionaries:

object.constructor === Map    // if true, object is treated as a dictionary

Arrays are treated as lists

Lists do not need to have the same number of items to be equivalent. Treetorn does make sure that all objects in a list compare to be the same:

let a = [1, 2, 3];
let b = [4, 5, 6];
// compare() must be true when comparing the first item of a with the remaining items in a and
// must be true when comparing the first item in a with each item in b

If one or both lists are empty, they are equivalent.

All other objects and primitives are treated as leaf nodes.

compare() of any two leaf nodes always returns true.

Not all collection types are supported!

WeakMap, Set, and WeakSet are treated as leaf nodes. This is probably not what you want.

What's next

  • Support additional collection types.
  • When two nodes in the tree don't match, return the tree path to the mismatching nodes.

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A JavaScript package that helps you enforce data strucutre consistency and write schemas by example

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