PropType validators that work with Immutable.js.
I got tired of seeing React.PropTypes.instanceOf(Immutable.List)
or React.PropTypes.instanceOf(Immutable.Map)
as PropTypes for components that should be specifying an Immutable.List
of something or that an Immutable.Map
contains some keys. A little "googling" came up empty, unless you want to use Flow, which I do not. So, I wrote react-immutable-proptypes
.
Usage is simple, they work with and like any React.PropType.*
validator.
var ImmutablePropTypes = require('react-immutable-proptypes'); var MyReactComponent = React.createClass({ // ... propTypes: { myRequiredImmutableList: ImmutablePropTypes.listOf( ImmutablePropTypes.contains({ someNumberProp: React.PropTypes.number.isRequired }) ).isRequired } // ... });
Since version 0.1.7 there are convenience helpers for "primitive" Immutable.js objects.
propTypes: { oldListTypeChecker: React.PropTypes.instanceOf(Immutable.List), anotherWay: ImmutablePropTypes.list, requiredList: ImmutablePropTypes.list.isRequired, mapsToo: ImmutablePropTypes.map, evenIterable: ImmutablePropTypes.iterable }
Installing via npmjs
npm install --save react-immutable-proptypes
React-Immutable-PropTypes has:
ImmutablePropTypes.list // Immutable.List.isList ImmutablePropTypes.map // Immutable.Map.isMap ImmutablePropTypes.orderedMap // Immutable.OrderedMap.isOrderedMap ImmutablePropTypes.set // Immutable.Set.isSet ImmutablePropTypes.orderedSet // Immutable.OrderedSet.isOrderedSet ImmutablePropTypes.stack // Immutable.Stack.isStack ImmutablePropTypes.seq // Immutable.Seq.isSeq ImmutablePropTypes.iterable // Immutable.Iterable.isIterable ImmutablePropTypes.record // instanceof Record ImmutablePropTypes.contains // Immutable.Iterable.isIterable - contains(shape) ImmutablePropTypes.mapContains // Immutable.Map.isMap - contains(shape)
ImmutablePropTypes.contains
(formerly shape
) is based on React.PropTypes.shape
and will try to work with any Immutable.Iterable
. In my usage it is the most used validator, as I'm often trying to validate that a map has certain properties with certain values.// ... aMap: ImmutablePropTypes.contains({ aList: ImmutablePropTypes.contains({ 0: React.PropTypes.number, 1: React.PropTypes.string, 2: React.PropTypes.number.isRequired, }).isRequired, }) // ... <SomeComponent aList={Immutable.fromJS({aList: [1, 'two', 3]})} />
ImmutablePropTypes.listOf
is based on React.PropTypes.array
and is specific to Immutable.List
.
ImmutablePropTypes.mapOf
allows you to control both map values and keys (in Immutable.Map, keys could be anything including another Immutable collections). It accepts two arguments - first one for values, second one for keys (optional). If you are interested in validation of keys only, just pass React.PropTypes.any
as the first argument.
// ... aMap: ImmutablePropTypes.mapOf( React.PropTypes.any, // validation for values ImmutablePropTypes.mapContains({ // validation for keys a: React.PropTypes.number.isRequired, b: React.PropTypes.string }) ) // ... const aMap = Immutable.Map([ [Immutable.Map({a: 1, b: '2'}), 'foo'], [Immutable.Map({a: 3}), [1, '2', 3]] ]); <SomeComponent aMap={aMap} />
ImmutablePropTypes.orderedMapOf
is basically the same as mapOf
, but it is specific to Immutable.OrderedMap
.
ImmutablePropTypes.orderedSetOf
is basically the same as listOf
, but it is specific to Immutable.OrderedSet
.
ImmutablePropTypes.stackOf
is basically the same as listOf
, but it is specific to Immutable.Stack
.
ImmutablePropTypes.iterableOf
is the generic form of listOf/mapOf. It is useful when there is no need to validate anything other than Immutable.js compatible (ie. Immutable.Iterable
). Continue to use listOf
and/or mapOf
when you know the type.
ImmutablePropTypes.recordOf
is like contains
, except it operates on Record properties.
// ... aRecord: ImmutablePropTypes.recordOf({ keyA: React.PropTypes.string, keyB: ImmutablePropTypes.list.isRequired }) // ...
ImmutablePropTypes.mapContains
is based on React.PropTypes.shape
and will only work with Immutable.Map
.// ... aMap: ImmutablePropTypes.mapContains({ aList: ImmutablePropTypes.list.isRequired, }) // ... <SomeComponent aList={Immutable.fromJS({aList: [1, 2]})} />
These two validators cover the output of Immutable.fromJS
on standard JSON data sources.
Please send a message or, better yet, create an issue/pull request if you know a better solution, find bugs, or want a feature. For example, should listOf
work with Immutable.Seq
or Immutable.Range
. I can think of reasons it should, but it is not a use case I have at the present, so I'm less than inclined to implement it. Alternatively, we could add a validator for sequences and/or ranges.
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