Morphmorph Save

:scream: Isomorphic transformations. Map, transform, filter, and morph your objects

Project README

Morph Morph

Isomorphic transformations. Map, transform, filter, reduce, and morph your objects

tested with jest linted with XO styled with prettier

Getting Started

$ npm i --save morphmorph

and then

const Mapper = require('morphmorph')

const mapper = new Mapper(/* [config] */)

const old = {
  here: {
    there: {
      anywhere: 'Earth'
    }
  }
}

const mappings = [ 'here.there.anywhere:location' ]

const transformation = mapper.map(mappings, old)
// -> { location: 'Earth' }

Creating Transformations

Every transformation can be represented by a mapping passed in as the first parameter to mapper.map(). Mappings can either be of type String or Object. A mapping such as 'before:after' is equivalent to: { field: 'before:after' }

Basic

const mappings = [
  'before:after',
  'egg:they.can.be.deeply.nested', // deeply nested target
  'data.user.updated:updated'      // deeply nested source
]
return mapper.map(mappings, obj)

Functions

When creating a mapping, if you pass a function as the type parameter, the function you passed will be called with the following properties to produce the result:

const mapping = {
  field: 'name',
  type: function (value, mapping, options, sourceObj, targetObj) {
    // value: the value grabbed from the source object
    // mapping: this specific mapping
    // options: config you specified by `new Mapper(options)`
    // sourceObj: object you passed as mapper.map(mapping, sourceObj)
    // targetObj: object you passed as mapper.map(m, sourceObj, targetObj). Default to `{}`
  }
}

Arrays

You can also pass an Array of functions and MapLib will perform a right-to-left function composition:

const mapping = {
  field: 'id:pin',
  type: [
    Number,                   // called last
    v => v.substr(0, 4)
    v => v.replace(/\D/g, '') // called first
  ]
}

mapper.map([mapping], { id: 'U1234342'}) // -> 1234

Function Compositions

If you want to do function compositions the traditional way, you can use Mapper.compose(...myFilterFunctions). Again it will be a right-to-left composition.

Reductions

By specifying your field property as an array, you can reduce multiple values into a single one. The values will be included as the first parameter of your type function. The target field is specified by the last mapping in your array

Example
const response = {
  user: {
    firstName: 'Mike',
    lastName: 'Fix',
    professionInfo: {
      title: 'Mr',
      occupation: 'Software Engineer'
    }
  }
}

const mapping = {
  field: [
    'user.firstName',
    'user.lastName',
    'user.professionInfo.title',
    'user.professionInfo.occupation',
    'description'
  ],
  type: ([name1, name2, title, occ]) =>
    `${title}. ${name1} ${name2} is a ${occ}`
}

mapper.map([mapping], response).description // -> 'Mr. Mike Fix is a Software Engineer'

Types

You can specify a type system by passing in the types option:

const types = {
  number: Number,
  notNullString: v => (v || '')
}

const mapper = new Mapper({ types })

and then specify which type to use as a string for each mapping:

const mappings = [
  { field: 'haircolor', type: 'notNullString' },
  { field: 'daysRemaining': type: 'number' }
]

return mapper.map(mappings, hairSubscriptionResponse)

Note: each function in the type specification is passed the same parameters as the normal type functions

Config

You can pass in a config object to Mapper to create your own mapping system:

Options
Field Type Default
types Object {}
objDelimiter String "."
mapDelimiter String ":"
preFilters Array []
postFilters Array []
Example
const mapper = new Mapper({
  objDelimiter: '|',
  mapDelimiter: '->',
  types: { bool: Boolean },
  preFilters: [ FILTER_NULL ],
  postFilters: [ REMOVE_PASSWORD ]
  // add other fields to your config here
})

Static methods

Mapper.get

Method used to grab a deeply nested field from an object.

const get = Mapper.get('key'/*, delimiter */)
const field = get({ key: true })
// -> true
Mapper.assign

Method used to apply a deeply nested field to an object.

const set = Mapper.assign('user.id'/*, delimiter */)
const targetObject = set({}, 1)
// -> { user: { id: 1 } }
Mapper.compose

Method used to apply function compositions

const fun1 = v => `${v}!`
const fun2 = v => v.toUpperCase()
const fun3 = String

const exclaim = Mapper.compose(fun1, fun2, fun3)
exclaim('hey') // -> HEY!

Bonus

Dependencies: None!
Size: <2KB gzipped

Examples

See /examples or test/index.spec.js for many examples of how to use MorphMorph.

Thanks

Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Morphmorph" Project. README Source: mfix22/morphmorph

Open Source Agenda Badge

Open Source Agenda Rating