Files
n8n_Demo/web_frontend/food-order-demo/node_modules/@humanwhocodes/object-schema
Yep_Q c3eb7125cc feat: 创建食品订单班演示系统基础框架
详细说明:
- 基于文旅订单班框架复制创建food-order-demo项目
- 修改端口配置为4174避免冲突
- 更新LandingPage为青莳轻食主题(绿色健康风格)
- 重新定义7个食品行业专业Agent:
  * 市场研究专家:轻食市场分析、客群画像
  * 营养配方师:营养成分配比、低卡高蛋白设计
  * 供应链管理专家:有机食材供应、溯源体系
  * 品牌策划师:品牌定位、店铺空间布局
  * 财务分析师:投资预算、ROI分析
  * 运营管理专家:运营流程、品控标准
  * 食品创业导师:中央协调、方案整合
- 创建专用启动脚本start.sh
- 验证系统可正常运行在端口4174
- 实现代码复用率90%,符合预期目标

影响文件: web_frontend/food-order-demo/
技术栈: React 18 + TypeScript + Tailwind CSS + Zustand
2025-09-28 10:32:44 +08:00
..

JavaScript ObjectSchema Package

by Nicholas C. Zakas

If you find this useful, please consider supporting my work with a donation.

Overview

A JavaScript object merge/validation utility where you can define a different merge and validation strategy for each key. This is helpful when you need to validate complex data structures and then merge them in a way that is more complex than Object.assign().

Installation

You can install using either npm:

npm install @humanwhocodes/object-schema

Or Yarn:

yarn add @humanwhocodes/object-schema

Usage

Use CommonJS to get access to the ObjectSchema constructor:

const { ObjectSchema } = require("@humanwhocodes/object-schema");

const schema = new ObjectSchema({

    // define a definition for the "downloads" key
    downloads: {
        required: true,
        merge(value1, value2) {
            return value1 + value2;
        },
        validate(value) {
            if (typeof value !== "number") {
                throw new Error("Expected downloads to be a number.");
            }
        }
    },

    // define a strategy for the "versions" key
    version: {
        required: true,
        merge(value1, value2) {
            return value1.concat(value2);
        },
        validate(value) {
            if (!Array.isArray(value)) {
                throw new Error("Expected versions to be an array.");
            }
        }
    }
});

const record1 = {
    downloads: 25,
    versions: [
        "v1.0.0",
        "v1.1.0",
        "v1.2.0"
    ]
};

const record2 = {
    downloads: 125,
    versions: [
        "v2.0.0",
        "v2.1.0",
        "v3.0.0"
    ]
};

// make sure the records are valid
schema.validate(record1);
schema.validate(record2);

// merge together (schema.merge() accepts any number of objects)
const result = schema.merge(record1, record2);

// result looks like this:

const result = {
    downloads: 75,
    versions: [
        "v1.0.0",
        "v1.1.0",
        "v1.2.0",
        "v2.0.0",
        "v2.1.0",
        "v3.0.0"
    ]
};

Tips and Tricks

Named merge strategies

Instead of specifying a merge() method, you can specify one of the following strings to use a default merge strategy:

  • "assign" - use Object.assign() to merge the two values into one object.
  • "overwrite" - the second value always replaces the first.
  • "replace" - the second value replaces the first if the second is not undefined.

For example:

const schema = new ObjectSchema({
    name: {
        merge: "replace",
        validate() {}
    }
});

Named validation strategies

Instead of specifying a validate() method, you can specify one of the following strings to use a default validation strategy:

  • "array" - value must be an array.
  • "boolean" - value must be a boolean.
  • "number" - value must be a number.
  • "object" - value must be an object.
  • "object?" - value must be an object or null.
  • "string" - value must be a string.
  • "string!" - value must be a non-empty string.

For example:

const schema = new ObjectSchema({
    name: {
        merge: "replace",
        validate: "string"
    }
});

Subschemas

If you are defining a key that is, itself, an object, you can simplify the process by using a subschema. Instead of defining merge() and validate(), assign a schema key that contains a schema definition, like this:

const schema = new ObjectSchema({
    name: {
        schema: {
            first: {
                merge: "replace",
                validate: "string"
            },
            last: {
                merge: "replace",
                validate: "string"
            }
        }
    }
});

schema.validate({
    name: {
        first: "n",
        last: "z"
    }
});

Remove Keys During Merge

If the merge strategy for a key returns undefined, then the key will not appear in the final object. For example:

const schema = new ObjectSchema({
    date: {
        merge() {
            return undefined;
        },
        validate(value) {
            Date.parse(value);  // throws an error when invalid
        }
    }
});

const object1 = { date: "5/5/2005" };
const object2 = { date: "6/6/2006" };

const result = schema.merge(object1, object2);

console.log("date" in result);  // false

Requiring Another Key Be Present

If you'd like the presence of one key to require the presence of another key, you can use the requires property to specify an array of other properties that any key requires. For example:

const schema = new ObjectSchema();

const schema = new ObjectSchema({
    date: {
        merge() {
            return undefined;
        },
        validate(value) {
            Date.parse(value);  // throws an error when invalid
        }
    },
    time: {
        requires: ["date"],
        merge(first, second) {
            return second;
        },
        validate(value) {
            // ...
        }
    }
});

// throws error: Key "time" requires keys "date"
schema.validate({
    time: "13:45"
});

In this example, even though date is an optional key, it is required to be present whenever time is present.

License

BSD 3-Clause