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Node module to work with Salesforce Id

sfid

This module enables you to easily work with Salesforce Ids. You can convert from short to long version of the Id, guess object type, and more. Example:

var sfid = require('sfid');

console.log(sfid('80120000000test'));           // 80120000000testAAA
console.log(sfid.short('80120000000testAAA'));  // 80120000000test

Content

Install

npm install --save sfid

Command line usage

Here's some examples (sfid --help for more commands):

sfid 80120000000test             # 80120000000testAAA
sfid --short 80120000000testAAA  # 80120000000test
sfid --type 80120000000testAAA   # Order

You can also use to pipe files and normalize Ids:

sfid --cat < data.csv > data-fixed.csv

Normalizing Ids

Salesforce Ids have two versions (15-character and 18-character). The long version includes a 3-character "checksum", which encodes the upper/lower case characters. This enables you to export Ids in systems which doesn't take case into account. If you're working with upper-case or lower-case Ids, you can use this module to normalize back to proper Ids. Example:

console.log(sfid('80120000000TESTAAA'));  // 80120000000testAAA
console.log(sfid('80120000000TESTAAE'));  // 80120000000tEstAAE

Remember if you cut of the checksum and work with 15-character version (short Id), the recovery of upper-case and lower-case characters is not possible.

Guessing type

The type guessing is based on the prefix or the Id. The list is maintained in the prefixes.json file and originally curated from resources found online (a) (b). The information is provided as-is and is not 100% certain. Furthermore the function only tries to guess the type.

Example:

console.log(sfid.guessType('80120000000testAAA'));  // Order
console.log(sfid.guessType('00120000000testAAA'));  // Account

If you work with custom types, you can register them to be recognized:

sfid.registerPrefix('a02', 'MyCustomObject__c');
console.log(sfid.guessType('a0220000000testAAA'));  // MyCustomObject__c

For other custom objects, the function returns 'custom' and for unknown types 'unknown'. For invalid Ids the function returns an empty string ''.

Advanced example: Finding Ids in text

var regexp = sfid.regexp();
var text   = '[log][info] 2017-02-03T07:14:55.234Z - Conversion complete - account: 00120000000testAAA - contact: 00320000000testAAA - not an id: 80120000000testXYZ';
var match;

while ((match = regexp.exec(text)) !== null) {
    if (!sfid.isValid(match[0])) { continue; }

    console.log('Found %s Id at position %s: %s', sfid.guessType(match[0]), match.index, match[0]);
}

API

.long(id : String) -> String

Alias: sfid(id)

Converts to long Id (18-character). For 15-character Ids, it appends the checksum. For 18-character Ids, it normalizes the upper-case and lower-case characters. For invalid Ids, returns empty string ''.

.short(id : String) -> String

First normalize using sfid.long function and then cut of the checksum. For invalid Ids, returns empty string ''.

.isValid(id : String) -> Boolean

Checks if a value is a valid Id.

.guessType(id : String) -> String | Array<String>

Guess object type based on the Id prefix. For invalid Ids, returns empty string ''.

.registerPrefix(prefix : String, objectName : String) -> Void

Adds a 3-character prefix to recognize using sfid.guessType function. Can be used for custom objects.

.checksum(id : String) -> String

Calculates 3-character checksum to append for an Id. Works for both 15- and 18-character Ids. The function assumes input is at least 15 characters long.

.regexp(completeMatch : Boolean) -> Regexp

Return regexp to use for searching for Ids in a text (default), or match completely (if completeMatch parameter is true).

License

Code is licensed under MIT, please see license.md file for details.

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Work easily with Salesforce Ids in Node.js

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