0.0.1 • Published 1 year ago

@anilanar/typesafe-routes v0.0.1

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
1 year ago

WIP

This is a hard-fork from typesafe-routes. Will update documentation as time allows.

Typesafe Routes

Spices up your favorite routing library by adding type-safety to plain string-based route definitions. Let typescript handle the detection of broken links in compilation time while you create maintainable software products.

You can use this utility with your favorite framework that follows path-to-regex syntax (although we only support a subset of it). You can find some demo applications with react-router or express in src/demo.

Typesafe Routes utilizes Template Literal Types and Recursive Conditional Types. These features are only available in typescript version 4.1 and above.

Installation (npm/yarn examples)

npm i typesafe-routes

# or

yarn add typesafe-routes

Usage

example

route(path: string, parserMap: Record<string, Parser>, children: Record<string, ChildRoute>)

  • path the path following the path-to-regex syntax.
  • parserMap contains parameter-specific Parser identified by parameter name
  • children assigns route children for nested routes

Examples

import { route, stringParser } from "typesafe-routes";

const accountRoute = route("/account/:accountId", {
  accountId: stringParser, // parser implicitly defines the type (string) of 'accountId'
}, {});

// serialisation:
accountRoute({ accountId: "5c9f1e79e96c" }).$
// => "/account/5c9f1e79e96c"

// parsing:
accountRoute.parseParams({ accountId: "123"}).$
// => { accountId: "123" }

While stringParser is probably the most common parser/serializer there are also intParser, floatParser, dateParser, and booleanParser shipped with the module. But you are not limited to these. If you wish to implement your custom parserserializer just imlement the interface Parser<T>. You can find more details on that topic further down the page.

const detailsRoute = route("details", {}, {}) const settingsRoute = route("settings", {}, { detailsRoute }); const accountRoute = route("/account", {}, { settingsRoute });

accountRoute({}).settingsRoute({}).detailsRoute({}).$ // => "/account/settings/details"

</details>

<details>
<summary>Absolute & Relative Routes</summary>

``` ts
import { route } from "typesafe-routes";

const invoice = route(":invoiceId", { invoiceId: intParser }, {});

const invoices = route("invoices", {}, { invoice });

const sales = route("sales", {}, { invoices });

const home = route("/", {}, { sales }); // root route prefixed with a "/"

// absolute routes:
home({}).sales({}).invoices({}).invoice({invoiceId: 1234}).$ // => "/sales/invoices/1234"
home({}).sales({}).invoices({}).$ // => "/sales/invoices"
home({}).sales({}).$ // => "/sales"
home({}).$ // => "/"

// relative routes
sales({}).invoices({}).invoice({invoiceId: 5678}).$ // => "sales/invoices/5678"
invoices({}).invoice({invoiceId: 8765}).$ // => "invoices/8765"
invoice({invoiceId: 4321}).$ // => "4321"

Parameters can be suffixed with a question mark (?) to make a parameter optional.

import { route, intParser } from "typesafe-routes";

const userRoute = route("/user/:userId/:groupId?", {
  userId: intParser,
  groupId: intParser // parser is required also required for optional parameters
}, {});

userRoute({ userId: 342 }).$ // groupId is optional
// => "/user/342"
userRoute({ userId: 5453, groupId: 5464 }).$
// => "/user/5453/5464"
userRoute({ groupId: 464 }).$
// => error because userId is missing

// parsing:
userRoute.parseParams({ userId: "65", groupId: "212" });
// returns { userId: 6, groupId: 12 }

Parameters can be prefixed with & to make the parameter a query parameter.

import { route, intParser } from "typesafe-routes";

const usersRoute = route("/users&:start&:limit", {
  start: intParser,
  limit: intParser,
}, {});

usersRoute({ start: 10, limit: 20 }).$
// returns "/users?start=10&limit=20"

When serialising nested routes the query params of a parent route are always being appended to the end of the locator string.

import { route, intParser } from "typesafe-routes";

const settingsRoute = route("/settings&:expertMode", {
  expertMode: booleanParser,
}, {});

const usersRoute = route("/users&:start&:limit", {
  start: intParser,
  limit: intParser,
}, {
  settingsRoute
});

usersRoute({ start: 10, limit: 20 }).settingsRoute({ expertMode: true })$
// returns "/users/settings?expertMode=true&start=10&limit=20"

userRoute.parseParams({ start: "10", limit: "20", expertMode: "false" });
// returns { start: 10, limit: 20, expertMode: false }

If you need to parse/serialize other datatypes than primitive types or dates or the build-in parsers don't meet your requirements for some reason you can create your own parsers with a few lines of code. The Parser<T> interface that helps yo to achieve that is defined as followed:

interface Parser<T> {
  parse: (s: string) => T;
  serialize: (x: T) => string;
}

The next example shows the implementation and usage of a typesafe Vector2D parser/serializer.

import { Parser, route } from "typesafe-routes";

interface Vector2D {
  x: number;
  y: number;
};

const vectorParser: Parser<Vector2D> = {
  serialize: (v) => btoa(JSON.stringify(v)),
  parse: (s) => JSON.parse(atob(s)),
};

const mapRoute = route("/map&:pos", { pos: vectorParser }, {});

mapRoute({ pos: { x: 1, y: 0 }}).$;
// returns "/map?pos=eyJ4IjoxLCJ5IjowfQ%3D%3D"

vectorParser.parseParams({pos: "eyJ4IjoxLCJ5IjowfQ=="})
// returns { pos: { x: 1, y: 0 }}

useRouteParams(route: RouteNode)

Internally useRouteParams depends on useParams that will be imported from the optional dependency react-router-dom. However unlike useParams the useRouteParams function is able to parse query strings by utilising qs.

import { route, useRouteParams } from "typesafe-routes";

const topicRoute = route("/:topicId&:limit?", {
  topicId: stringParser,
  limit: floatParser,
}, {});

const Component = () => {
  const { topicId, limit } = useRouteParams(topicRoute);

  return <>{...}</>;
}

<Link> and <NavLink>

Same as the original <Link> and <NavLink> from react-router-dom but require the to property to be a route:

import { route, Link, NavLink } from "typesafe-routes";

const topicRoute = route("/topic", {}, {});

<Link to={topicRoute({})}>Topic</Link>
<NavLink to={topicRoute({})}>Topic</NavLink>

<Link to="/topic">Topic</Link> // error "to" prop can't be string 
<NavLink to="/topic">Topic</NavLink> // error "to" prop can't be string 

template

typesafe-routes implements a subset of template syntax of react-router and thus is compatible with it. But since specifying additional query params would break the compatibility (react-router doesn't understand the & prefix) the .template property doesn't contain any of such parameters and can be used to define router in your react-router app:

import { route } from "typesafe-routes";

const topicRoute = route("/:topicId&:limit?", {
  topicId: stringParser,
  limit: floatParser,
}, {});

<Route path={topicRoute.template}> // template only contains the "/:topicId" path
  <Topic />
</Route>

Developer Fuel

You can have some impact and improve the quality of this project not only by opening issues and opening PRs but also by buying me a cup of fresh coffee as a small reward for my effort. ¡Gracias!

Roadmap

So far I consider this library feature-complete that's why I will be mainly concerned about fixing bugs and improving the API. However, if some high demand for additional functionality or PRs shows up I might be considering expanding the scope.

0.0.1

1 year ago