Files
openapi-types/2.0/data-types/boolean.ts
2025-10-01 19:33:18 +00:00

182 lines
5.4 KiB
TypeScript

import type { Extension } from "../extensions";
import type { XMLObject } from "../xml";
/**
* -----
* Boolean Schema
* -----
*
* Schema for boolean data types in Swagger 2.0.
*
* Boolean schemas represent true/false values and are used for flags, switches,
* and other binary state indicators in APIs. They are simple but essential
* data types that provide clear semantic meaning for binary choices.
*
* Boolean schemas are commonly used for feature flags, status indicators,
* configuration options, and other binary state representations. They support
* default values and examples to help API consumers understand the expected
* behavior.
*
* | Version | Reference |
* |---|-----|
* | 2.0 | {@link https://swagger.io/specification/v2/#data-types | Swagger 2.0 Data Types} |
* | 2.0 | {@link https://swagger.io/specification/v2/#schema-object | Swagger 2.0 Schema Object} |
*
* -----
* Fields
* -----
*
* @property `type` - Must be "boolean" for boolean schemas.
* @property `description` - A short description of the boolean schema.
* @property `title` - A short title for the boolean schema.
* @property `default` - Declares the default value for the boolean.
* @property `example` - Example boolean value.
*
* @note
* Boolean schemas inherit common properties from BaseSchemaProperties.
* No additional validation properties are needed for boolean values as they
* are inherently simple (true/false only).
*
* -----
* Examples
* -----
*
* @example (feature flag boolean):
* ```ts
* const featureFlagSchema: BooleanSchema = {
* type: "boolean",
* description: "Whether the new feature is enabled",
* default: false,
* example: true
* };
* ```
*
* @example (status boolean):
* ```ts
* const isActiveSchema: BooleanSchema = {
* type: "boolean",
* description: "Whether the user account is active",
* default: true,
* example: true
* };
* ```
*
* @example (configuration boolean):
* ```ts
* const notificationsEnabledSchema: BooleanSchema = {
* type: "boolean",
* description: "Whether email notifications are enabled",
* default: true,
* example: false
* };
* ```
*
* @example (permission boolean):
* ```ts
* const canEditSchema: BooleanSchema = {
* type: "boolean",
* description: "Whether the user can edit this resource",
* example: true
* };
* ```
*/
export interface BooleanSchema extends Extension {
/**
* The type of the schema. Must be "boolean" for boolean schemas.
*
* This property is required and must be set to "boolean" to indicate
* that this schema represents true/false values.
*
* @example "boolean"
*/
type: "boolean";
/**
* The extending format for the previously mentioned type.
* See Swagger 2.0 Data Type Formats for further details.
*
* Formats provide additional semantic information about the data type,
* enabling more precise validation and better tooling support. Swagger 2.0
* defines several standard formats, but custom formats are also allowed.
*
* @see {@link https://swagger.io/specification/v2/#dataTypeFormat | Swagger 2.0 Data Type Formats}
*
* @example "int32"
* @example "date"
* @example "email"
* @example "uuid"
*/
format?: string;
/**
* A short description of the schema. GFM syntax can be used for rich text representation.
*
* This description should provide clear information about what the schema
* represents and how it should be used. It's commonly displayed in API
* documentation and code generation tools.
*
* @example "A user object containing basic information"
* @example "Email address in RFC 5322 format"
*/
description?: string;
/**
* A short title for the schema.
*
* The title provides a human-readable name for the schema, often used
* in documentation and UI displays. It should be concise but descriptive.
*
* @example "User"
* @example "Pet"
* @example "Order"
*/
title?: string;
/**
* Declares the value of the schema that the server will use if none is provided.
* Unlike JSON Schema, the value MUST conform to the defined type for the Schema Object.
*
* This is a Swagger 2.0 specific requirement that differs from JSON Schema.
* The default value must be valid according to the schema's type and constraints.
*
* @example "defaultValue"
* @example 10
* @example { name: "John", age: 30 }
* @example ["item1", "item2"]
*/
default?: unknown;
/**
* An instance validates successfully against this keyword if its value is equal to one of the elements in this keyword's array value.
*
* @see {@link https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-fge-json-schema-validation-00#section-5.5.1 | JSON Schema Validation - enum}
*
* @example ["option1", "option2", "option3"]
* @example ["red", "green", "blue"]
* @example [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
*/
enum?: unknown[];
/**
* A free-form property to include an example of an instance for this schema.
*
* Examples help developers understand how to use the schema and what kind
* of data is expected. They are commonly used by documentation generators
* and API testing tools.
*
* @example { name: "Puma", id: 1 }
* @example "example string value"
* @example 42
* @example ["item1", "item2"]
*/
example?: unknown;
/**
* XML representation metadata for the schema.
* Allows for fine-tuned XML model definitions.
*
* @example { name: "isActive", attribute: false }
*/
xml?: XMLObject;
}