Clean up messy package metadata from the npm registry
The package data served by the npm registry is messy and confusing. The folks at npm, Inc maintain a tool called normalize-package-data which does a lot of work to clean this data up, but the resulting object is still a bit confusing.
nice-package
uses normalize-package-data
as a starter, then does even more
package cleanup:
- uses the
doc['dist-tags'].latest
as the baseline for package metadata - derives
starsCount
from theusers
object - derives a
versions
array from thetime
object - renames
_npmUser
tolastPublisher
, because it's a more intuitive name. - renames
maintainers
toowners
, for consistency with the CLI commands. - normalizes GitHub repository URLs to
https
format - moves internal bookkeeping properties like
_id
and_from
into another
object that can easily be omitted. - more...
- package-stream: streams nice packages from the npm registry.
- nice-registry: A server that dishes out nice packges.
- fetch-nice-package: fetch a nice package by name.
npm install nice-package --save
nice-package
exports a class. To create a new package instance,
call new Package(doc)
, where doc
is a JSON package object from the npm registry:
const got = require('got')
const Package = require('nice-package')
got('https://registry.npmjs.com/express', {json: true})
.then(function (doc) {
var pkg = new Package(doc)
console.log(JSON.stringify(pkg, null, 2))
})
You can also instantiate a nice package from package.json
data:
const Package = require('nice-package')
const pkg = new Package(require('node_modules/express/package.json'))
pkg.dependsOn('array-flatten')
// => true
You can pick specific properties to return:
const pkg = new Package(pkgData, {pick: ['name', 'description']})
// {
// name: 'tlds',
// description: 'List of TLDs'
// }
or you can omit properties.
Sometimes you don't want the other
data, the readme
, etc.
const pkg = new Package(pkgData, {omit: ['other', 'readme', 'versions']})
Note: pick
and omit
will also accept comma-delimited strings instead
of arrays. This works nicely if you're using query params from a URL as options
to
nice-package
:
const pkg = new Package(pkgData, {omit: 'other,readme,versions'})
A nice package comes with convenience methods:
query
String
Performs a case-insensitive search against the JSON-stringified object. Returns a Boolean indicating whether the given query is present in the object.
pkgName
String - The name of another package
Returns a Boolean indicating whether the given pkgName
is listed in dependencies
.
pkgName
String - The name of another package
Returns a Boolean indicating whether the given pkgName
is listed in devDependencies
.
pkgName
String - The name of another package
Returns a Boolean indicating whether the given pkgName
is listed in
dependencies
or devDependencies
.
A getter method that returns an array of the dependencies
keys.
A getter method that returns an array of the devDependencies
keys.
A getter method that returns an array of all the dependencies
and
devDependencies
keys.
nice-package
uses a JSON schema to validate packages.
The following properties are required:
name
Stringdescription
Stringversion
String
To determine if a package is valid, use the pkg.valid
getter method:
pkg.valid
// => false
To see validation errors on a package, use the pkg.validationErrors
getter method:
pkg.validationErrors
The result is an array of revalidator errors.
npm install
npm test
- github-url-to-object: Extract user, repo, and other interesting properties from GitHub URLs
- normalize-registry-metadata: clean package metadata objects you get from registry changes feeds
- revalidator: A cross-browser / node.js validator powered by JSON Schema
- semver: The semantic version parser used by npm.
- require-dir: Helper to require() directories.
- standard: JavaScript Standard Style
- tap-spec: Formatted TAP output like Mocha's spec reporter
- tape: tap-producing test harness for node and browsers
MIT
π Thanks to emilyrose for giving up
the nice-package
name on npm.
Generated by package-json-to-readme