starlogic

0.1.5 • Public • Published

StarLogic

Interstellar Functional Pro-active Programming

What is it?

A superset of the following things: an event listener, a Controller from the MVC pattern, a data validator, and a framework for handling your business logic.

The API provided gives you a Router factory, so in order to use it you must execute it first to make a router.

var App = StarLogic();

It has two major functions.

Add rule/route

App.addRule(rule, func);
App.addRoute(rule, func);

Don't be fooled by the semantics, these functions do the exact same thing. They add a rule and function to the application stack.

A rule is an object definition that is used to compare everything that gets push through StarLogic.

The func will simply be executed given the proper rule conditions specefied.

Route/Push

App.push(BusinessObject);
App.process(BusinessObject);
App.route(BusinessObject);

Same idea, this defers the business object to be compared to the rules specified with the addRule/addRoute functions.

They will executed in the same order they were added to StarLogic.

Top Level Example

I have a process that needs to update user information conditionally.  
If it has no id, that must be generated first.
If the user has no specialty, set the specialty_id to 0.
If the user has an email, set must_validate to true.
If the user finally has information that isn't updated and it can update, send an ajax request.
Then update the front end given the response.

Sounds pretty reasonable? I think so. Let's code these business requirements.

//using browserified bundle...
var StarLogic = require('starlogic');

//Generate your app
var App = StarLogic();

//If it has no id, that must be generated first.
App.addRule({ type: 'user', id: false }, function(obj){ obj.id = new Guid().toString(); });

//If the user has no specialty, set the specialty_id to 0.
App.addRule({ type: 'user', specialty_id: false }, function(obj){ obj.specialty_id = 0; });

//If the user has an email, set must_validate to true.
App.addRule({ type: 'user', email: /[a-z0-9][a-z\._0-9]*@[a-z0-9_]+[\.][a-z]+/i }, 
            function(obj){ obj.must_validate = true; });

//if can_update is true...
App.addRule({ type: 'user', can_update: true }, function(BO){
  //specify jQuery callback in done...
  $.post('url...', BO, 'json')
    .done(App.route)//pass server result to app router 
                    //(define the rules for incoming ajax requests...)
    .fail(function(){
      App.route({type:'error', message: 'This is message'});
  });
  //update DOM here to show the process is working
});

//Our server returns a property: {from_server: true}
App.addRule({ from_server: true, type: 'user' }, function(user) {
    //perform dom update complete here
});

//if the type is error and there is a message...
App.addRule({ type: 'error', message: true }, function(){
  //error handling happens here
});

Everything is organized now. Let's actually push a user through our application logic.

var newUser = {
  type: 'user',
  name: 'John Smith'
  email: 'John.Smith@pat.io',
  can_update: true
};

//now everything should execute given your business rules
newUser = App.push(newUser);
//App.push and App.route returns the value it was passed

console.log(newUser);
//{ 
//  type: 'user', 
//  name: 'John Smith', 
//  email: 'John.Smith@pat.io', 
//  can_update: true, 
//  id: 'guid value here',
//  specialty_id: 0,
//  must_validate: true
//}

Everything just magically works.

Rules for rules

Given the following rules, you can define which functions get executed by using the reference below.

var rulesAboutRules = {
  'falsy': false, //if the property is falsy "if(!prop)"
  'truthy': true, //if the property is truthy "if(prop)"
  'isMember': NaN, //NaN specifies if the property is a member of the object (prop in BusinessObject)
  'lengthGreaterThan': 9, //this property's length must be greater than or equal to 9
  'lengthLessThan': -9, //this property's length must be less than or equal to 9
  'execFunction': function(propVal, name){ //property value, and name are parameters
    this; //is the business object itself
    return true; //passes the test (evaluates truthy)
    return false; //does not pass (evaluates falsy)
  },
  'regex': /regex/i, //performs regex.test(prop) to determine passing
  'String': 'value' //performs strict equality to determine value
};

Nesting routers

This is by far the easiest concept to define. Since App.route is a function that takes one parameter (your business object), you can simply pass it to another router.

var App = StarLogic();

var UserRouter = StarLogic();
//pass the route function of UserRouter to App.addRule to delegate multiple functionalities to UserRouter
App.addRule({ type: 'user' }, UserRouter.route);

Data Validation Pattern

var Validator = StarLogic();
Validator.addRule({
  id: isGuid, //given function isGuid
  userName: 7, //has 7 characters
  password: isGood //given function isGood
}, function(bo){ bo.valid = true; });

//Any time App gets a user, validate it
App.addRule({ type: 'user' }, Validator.process)

//if it's valid, do this
App.addRule({ type: 'user', valid: true }, function(){
  //is valid
});

//if it's invalid, do this
App.addRule({ type: 'user', valid: false }, function(){
  //is not valid
})

var x = new User(); //do something to get some data

App.process(x);
//returns x

Any time your application can be defined in terms of functions and rules, StarLogic is the 8kb browserified library you really wanted.

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npm i starlogic

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Version

0.1.5

License

MIT

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