json-overrides creates name-specific manifests from a plain object. Overrides object properties with name-specific ones and removes the overrides property.
$ npm install json-overrides
override(json: string | Overridable, name: string): Object
import override from "json-overrides";
let obj = {
a: "Default a value",
b: "Default b value",
overrides: {
projectA: {
a: "a value for projectA",
},
projectB: {
a: "a value for projectB",
},
projectC: {
a: "a value for projectC",
b: "b value for projectC",
},
},
};
override(obj, "projectA");
// {
// a: "a value for projectA",
// b: "Default b value"
// }
override(obj, "projectB");
// {
// a: "a value for projectB",
// b: "Default b value"
// }
override(obj, "projectC");
// {
// a: "a value for projectC",
// b: "b value for projectC"
// }
override(obj, "projectD");
// Error: Overrides for projectD not found
override(123, "projectD");
// TypeError: Expected JSON to be an object (got number)
override(true, "projectD");
// TypeError: Expected JSON to be an object (got boolean)
Note: you can pass valid serialized objects as argument, e.g.
override(JSON.stringify(object), key");
.
$ npm test