Constraints
You can create constrained types that will use validation rules to check that the input is not violating any of the configured constraints. You can treat it as a lower level guarantee that you're not instantiating objects that are broken.
All types support the constraints API, but not all constraints are suitable for a particular primitive, it's up to you to set up constraints that make sense.
Under the hood it uses dry-logic
and all of its predicates are supported.
string = Types::String.constrained(min_size: 3)
string['foo']
# => "foo"
string['fo']
# => Dry::Types::ConstraintError: "fo" violates constraints
email = Types::String.constrained(
format: /\A[\w+\-.]+@[a-z\d\-]+(\.[a-z]+)*\.[a-z]+\z/i
)
email["jane@doe.org"]
# => "jane@doe.org"
email["jane"]
# => Dry::Types::ConstraintError: "jane" violates constraints