schema.Values
Like Array, Values
are unbounded in size. The definition here describes the types of values to expect,
with keys being any string.
Describes a map whose values follow the given schema.
definition
: required A singular schema that this array contains or a mapping of schema to attribute values.schemaAttribute
: optional (required ifdefinition
is not a singular schema) The attribute on each entity found that defines what schema, per the definition mapping, to use when normalizing. Can be a string or a function. If given a function, accepts the following arguments:value
: The input value of the entity.parent
: The parent object of the input array.key
: The key at which the input array appears on the parent object.
Make it mutable (new items can be assigned) with Collections
Instance Methods
define(definition)
: When used, thedefinition
passed in will be merged with the original definition passed to theValues
constructor. This method tends to be useful for creating circular references in schema.
Values
is named after Object.values() as
its schemas are used for the value of an Object.
Usage
{"firstThing":{"id":1},"secondThing":{"id":2}}
export class Item extends Entity { id = 0; } export const getItems = new RestEndpoint({ path: '/items', schema: new schema.Values(Item), }); function ItemPage() { const items = useSuspense(getItems); return <pre>{JSON.stringify(items, undefined, 2)}</pre>; } render(<ItemPage />);
Polymorphic types
If your input data is an object that has values of more than one type of entity, but their schema is not easily defined by the key, you can use a mapping of schema, much like schema.Union and schema.Array.
If your data returns an object that you did not provide a mapping for, the original object will be returned in the result and an entity will not be created.
string schemaAttribute
[{"id":1,"type":"link","url":"https://ntucker.true.io","title":"Nate site"},{"id":10,"type":"post","content":"good day!"}]
export abstract class FeedItem extends Entity { id = 0; declare readonly type: 'link' | 'post'; } export class Link extends FeedItem { readonly type = 'link' as const; readonly url: string = ''; readonly title: string = ''; } export class Post extends FeedItem { readonly type = 'post' as const; readonly content: string = ''; } export const getFeed = new RestEndpoint({ path: '/feed', schema: new schema.Values( { link: Link, post: Post, }, 'type', ), });
function schemaAttribute
The return values should match a key in the definition
. Here we'll show the same behavior as the 'string'
case, except we'll append an 's'.
[{"id":1,"type":"link","url":"https://ntucker.true.io","title":"Nate site"},{"id":10,"type":"post","content":"good day!"}]
export abstract class FeedItem extends Entity { id = 0; declare readonly type: 'link' | 'post'; } export class Link extends FeedItem { readonly type = 'link' as const; readonly url: string = ''; readonly title: string = ''; } export class Post extends FeedItem { readonly type = 'post' as const; readonly content: string = ''; } export const getFeed = new RestEndpoint({ path: '/feed', schema: new schema.Values( { links: Link, posts: Post, }, (input: Link | Post, parent: unknown, key: string) => `${input.type}s`, ), });