Query strings for Go (opinionated!) https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/annybs/go-qs

Aneurin Barker Snook 0d6091b30c duplicate license to each package 11 mesi fa
LICENSE.md 0d6091b30c duplicate license to each package 11 mesi fa
README.md b5d4401dcc add readme for each package 11 mesi fa
filter.go 7b189b333e start adding more complex filter support 1 anno fa
filter_test.go 7f3dc0c79d add validation error type, fix tests, add number tests 1 anno fa
go.mod ec866af4ef migrate from recipeer org to annybs 1 anno fa
join.go d94f155714 add qs joins 1 anno fa
join_test.go 7f3dc0c79d add validation error type, fix tests, add number tests 1 anno fa
page.go d94f155714 add qs joins 1 anno fa
page_test.go 7f3dc0c79d add validation error type, fix tests, add number tests 1 anno fa
pagination.go 137dc89f64 rename query package to qs 1 anno fa
pagination_test.go 7f3dc0c79d add validation error type, fix tests, add number tests 1 anno fa
sort.go 137dc89f64 rename query package to qs 1 anno fa
sort_test.go 7f3dc0c79d add validation error type, fix tests, add number tests 1 anno fa

README.md

Go Query String

An opinionated suite of functions to help read common query strings into useful objects, mainly focused on data querying.

This particular package is primarily for the author's own use; if you want to pattern your query strings differently, this library is not for you!

Features

This package includes support for:

  • Filters filter=title eq Bolognese&filter=serves gte 4
  • Joins join=author&join=ingredient
  • Pagination limit=10&offset=5&page=3 (note: offset overrides page)
  • Sorting sort=title asc&sort=serves asc

You can read these individually or use the ReadPage() function to retrieve a convenient Page object that's easy to pass along to your querying code.

Example

package main

import (
	"net/http"

	"github.com/annybs/go/qs"
	"github.com/annybs/go/rest"
)

type Handler struct{}

func (*Handler) ServeHTTP(w http.ResponseWriter, req *http.Request) {
	page, err := qs.ReadPage(req.URL.Query(), nil)
	if err != nil {
		rest.WriteErrorJSON(w, err)
	} else {
		rest.WriteResponseJSON(w, http.StatusOK, page)
	}
}

func main() {
	http.ListenAndServe("localhost:8000", &Handler{})
}

Open http://localhost:8000 in your browser and try different query strings (per Features, above) to see an example response object. You can also enter malformed query strings, which will cause a validation error.

License

See LICENSE.md