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terrain-keypath

version dependencies devDependencies

An opinionated keypath type

A natural task in JS is to query or modify an element of a deeply-nested JSON object. However, if you're doing operations like that frequently and involving dynamic, different elements, it becomes a pain to describe where all those elements are located within the deep object.

terrain-keypath provides a standard format for specifying elements of, among other possible use cases, deep JSON objects. A KeyPath is an array of WayPoints, each of which is a string or number. For example, for the document

doc = {
 a: {
  b: {
   c: [
     { d: 'e' },
     { f: 'g' },
   ]
  }
 }
}

you would use e.g. const kp = new KeyPath(['a', 'b', 'c', '1', 'f']) to obtain a reference to the object whose value is 'g'.

KeyPath makes the design decision that every WayPoint should be a string unless you are indicating the unique numeric wildcard token -1. The semantic intention of the wildcard token is to denote "all children" of an element, e.g. all entries of an array. For example, const kp = new KeyPath(['a', 'b', 'c', -1]) is meant to mean "all children of a.b.c".

It's worth emphasizing that any string is a valid JSON field name, including field names with special characters like ., *, etc. Thus, if you get a deep JSON document "from the wild," there's no guarantee that other existing keypath libraries (which typically use such special tokens as wildcards or waypoint delimiters) will work.

Particularly in conjunction with yadeep, we have tested terrain-keypath against a broad variety of wild JSON documents and have successfully deployed enterprise applications using this keypath type.

TypeScript definitions included!

Installation

npm install terrain-keypath