schema.Array
Creates a schema to normalize an array of schemas. If the input value is an Object instead of an Array,
the normalized result will be an Array of the Object's values.
Note: The same behavior can be defined with shorthand syntax: [ mySchema ]
- definition: required A singular schema that this array contains or a mapping of attribute values to schema.
- schemaAttribute: optional (required if- definitionis 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.
For unbounded collections with string keys, use schema.Values
Make it mutable with Collections
Instance Methods
- define(definition): When used, the- definitionpassed in will be merged with the original definition passed to the- Arrayconstructor. This method tends to be useful for creating circular references in schema.
Usage
To describe a simple array of a singular entity type:
[{"id":"123","name":"Jim"},{"id":"456","name":"Jane"}]
export class User extends Entity { id = ''; name = ''; pk() { return this.id; } } export const getUsers = new RestEndpoint({ path: '/users', schema: new schema.Array(User), }); function UsersPage() { const users = useSuspense(getUsers); return ( <div> {users.map(user => ( <div key={user.pk()}>{user.name}</div> ))} </div> ); } render(<UsersPage />);
Polymorphic types
If your input data is an array of more than one type of entity, it is necessary to define a schema mapping.
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 { readonly id: number = 0; declare readonly type: 'link' | 'post'; pk() { return `${this.id}`; } } export class Link extends FeedItem { readonly type = 'link' as const; readonly url: string = ''; readonly title: string = ''; } export class Post extends FeedItem { readonly type = 'post' as const; readonly content: string = ''; } export const getFeed = new RestEndpoint({ path: '/feed', schema: new schema.Array( { link: Link, post: Post, }, 'type', ), });
function schemaAttribute
The return values should match a key in the definition. Here we'll show the same behavior as the 'string'
case, except we'll append an 's'.
[{"id":1,"type":"link","url":"https://ntucker.true.io","title":"Nate site"},{"id":10,"type":"post","content":"good day!"}]
export abstract class FeedItem extends Entity { readonly id: number = 0; declare readonly type: 'link' | 'post'; pk() { return `${this.id}`; } } 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.Array( { links: Link, posts: Post, }, (input: Link | Post, parent, key) => `${input.type}s`, ), });