Syntactic sugar for creating JSON Type Definition (RFC 8927).
All types from Learn JSON Typedef in 5 Minutes are covered, preserving original naming with a few exceptions:
enum
is created viavalues()
, becauseenum
is a reserved keywordelements
is created viaarray()
, for brevityproperties
is calledobject()
, for brevitydiscriminator
is calledmatch()
, for brevity
npm install jsontypedef
Write:
import { string, number, object } from 'jsontypedef'
console.log(object({
propertyA: string(),
propertyB: object({
innerPropertyC: number(),
})
}))
Get:
{
properties: {
propertyA: { type: 'string' },
propertyB: {
properties: {
innerPropertyC: { type: 'float64' }
}
}
}
}
Saves you a good deal of typing maintaining big type definitions.
See all examples in the test suite.
empty(metadata)
boolean(metadata)
string(metadata)
timestamp(metadata)
float64(metadata)
(JavaScript numbers)number(metadata)
# alias to float64()integer(metadata)
# alias to float64()
For compatibility with other languages and full JTD support:
float32(metadata)
int8(metadata)
uint8(metadata)
int16(metadata)
uint16(metadata)
int32(metadata)
uint32(metadata)
values(items, metadata)
is an alias to create theenum
JTD form.enum
is a reserved word in JavaScript.
array(type, metadata)
creates theelements
JTD formobject(props, optional, additional)
creates theproperties
JTD formmatch(field, mapping, metadata)
creates thediscriminator
JTD form
A nullable
helper is provided for easily creating nullable rules.
const { nullable } = require('jsontypedef')
nullable.empty(metadata)
nullable.boolean(metadata)
nullable.string(metadata)
nullable.timestamp(metadata)
nullable.float64(metadata)
(JavaScript numbers)nullable.number(metadata)
# alias to float64()nullable.integer(metadata)
# alias to float64()nullable.float32(metadata)
nullable.int8(metadata)
nullable.uint8(metadata)
nullable.int16(metadata)
nullable.uint16(metadata)
nullable.int32(metadata)
nullable.uint32(metadata)
nullable.values(items, metadata)
is an alias to create theenum
JTD form.enum
is a reserved word in JavaScript.
nullable.array(type, metadata)
creates theelements
JTD formnullable.object(props, optional, additional)
creates theproperties
JTD form
Functionality-wise, JSON Type Definition is a subset of JSON Schema, with one exception: JSON Schema doesn't support tagged unions (the discriminator
JTD form). There are no data constraints, so you can't say a string is supposed to have a length of 5, you can only say a string is a string.
Fastify uses ajv
for validation and serialization, but only supports JSON Schema out of the box, although its addSchema()
method could be reworked to recognize JTD in the future. Although ajv
itself already supports JSON Type Definition, it might take a while for the support to come to Fastify.
That is not a problem because we can easily translate JTD schemas to JSON Schema with the jsonschema
submodule provided by this library. which offers all methods from the main API but will output JSON Schema compatible schemas. So you can use it with Fastify:
import Fastify from 'fastify'
import { object, string } from 'jsontypedef/jsonschema'
const schema = {
headers: object({
'x-foo': string()
}),
}
fastify.post('/the/url', { schema }, (req, reply) => {
reply.send('ok')
})
The jsonschema
submodule also includes number()
and integer()
for convenience.
See the full test suite for more usage examples.