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mockin

v0.0.1

Published

pseudo frontend-relational database

Downloads

5

Readme

Mockin

A pseudo-relational frontend database for autonomous global communication
*powered by immutablejs

build status

Example

const relationalDatabase = Map({
    users: Map({
        1: Map({
            id: 1,
            name: 'Joe'
            friendsTWR: [1]
        })
    })
    friends: Map({
        1: Map({
            id: 1,
            name: 'Tim'
        })
    })
})

Get a user instance

const user = relationalDatabase.getIn(['users', '1'])

Retrieve relational data

import {gex} from 'mockin'
const friends = gex(relationalDatabase, 'friends', user)

When is this useful?

When multiple objects share information.

How to

Generate Database

import {wrapMapState} from 'mockin'

const user = {
            id: 1,
            name: 'Joe'
            friends: [{
                id: 1,
                name: 'Tim'
            }]
        }

const frontendRelationalDatabase = wrapMapState(user, ['users', '1'], Map())

Modify Database

import {wrapMapState} from 'mockin'

const users = [{
            id: 1,
            name: 'Joe'
            friends: [{
                id: 1,
                name: 'Jim'
            }]
        }]

const newFrontendRelationalDatabase = 
wrapMapState(user, ['users'], frontendRelationalDatabase)

How it works

Mockin is powered by objects and arrays of objects that have ids. As mockin processes a regular object, it looks for the id attribute in child objects to know whether or not it should be moved to its own property (akin to tables in databases). If it finds an object with an id inside another object, as with the 'friend' example above, it creates a new property in the original object (the child object name with a TWR suffix) that is an array of ids. It then moves the child object into its own property. The gex function can then be used to recall the relations of an instance, and will by default filter out objects with a non-false deleted_at attribute.