@nacelle/rich-text-utils

A set of Typescript types and helpers to work with Rich Text fields.

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import nacelleRichTextUtils from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/@nacelle/rich-text-utils';
</script>

README

rich-text-utils

A set of Typescript types and helpers to work with Rich Text fields.

Installation

Using npm:

npm install rich-text-utils

Using yarn:

yarn add rich-text-utils

rast document validation

You can use the validate() function to check if an object is compatible with the rast specification:

import { validate } from 'rich-text-utils';

const richText = {
  value: {
    schema: 'rast',
    document: {
      type: 'root',
      children: [
        {
          type: 'heading',
          level: 1,
          children: [
            {
              type: 'span',
              value: 'Hello!',
              marks: ['foobar'],
            },
          ],
        },
      ],
    },
  },
};

const result = validate(richText);

if (!result.valid) {
  console.error(result.message); // "span has an invalid mark "foobar"
}

rast format specs

The package exports a number of constants that represents the rules of the rast specification.

Take a look a the definitions.ts file for their definition:

const blockquoteNodeType = 'blockquote';
const blockNodeType = 'block';
const codeNodeType = 'code';
const headingNodeType = 'heading';
const inlineEntryNodeType = 'inlineEntry';
const EntryLinkNodeType = 'entryLink';
const linkNodeType = 'link';
const listItemNodeType = 'listItem';
const listNodeType = 'list';
const paragraphNodeType = 'paragraph';
const rootNodeType = 'root';
const spanNodeType = 'span';

const allowedNodeTypes = [
  'paragraph',
  'list',
  // ...
];

const allowedChildren = {
  paragraph: 'inlineNodes',
  list: ['listItem'],
  // ...
};

const inlineNodeTypes = [
  'span',
  'link',
  // ...
];

const allowedAttributes = {
  heading: ['level', 'children'],
  // ...
};

const allowedMarks = [
  'strong',
  'code',
  // ...
];

Typescript Types

The package exports Typescript types for all the different nodes that a rast document can contain.

Take a look a the types.ts file for their definition:

type Node
type BlockNode
type InlineNode
type RootType
type Root
type ParagraphType
type Paragraph
type HeadingType
type Heading
type ListType
type List
type ListItemType
type ListItem
type CodeType
type Code
type BlockquoteType
type Blockquote
type BlockType
type Block
type SpanType
type Mark
type Span
type LinkType
type Link
type EntryLinkType
type EntryLink
type InlineEntryType
type InlineEntry
type WithChildrenNode
type Document
type NodeType
type RichText
type Record

Typescript Type guards

It also exports all a number of type guards that you can use to guarantees the type of a node in some scope.

Take a look a the guards.ts file for their definition:

function hasChildren(node: Node): node is WithChildrenNode {}
function isInlineNode(node: Node): node is InlineNode {}
function isHeading(node: Node): node is Heading {}
function isSpan(node: Node): node is Span {}
function isRoot(node: Node): node is Root {}
function isParagraph(node: Node): node is Paragraph {}
function isList(node: Node): node is List {}
function isListItem(node: Node): node is ListItem {}
function isBlockquote(node: Node): node is Blockquote {}
function isBlock(node: Node): node is Block {}
function isCode(node: Node): node is Code {}
function isLink(node: Node): node is Link {}
function isEntryLink(node: Node): node is EntryLink {}
function isInlineEntry(node: Node): node is InlineEntry {}
function isRichText(object: any): object is RichText {}