Files
TREK/shared
Maurice 50609b078a feat(places): bulk "change category" from the selection toolbar
Closes the UI half of #1168: in the Places selection mode, a new tag button
before delete opens a category picker that applies one category (or "No
category") to every selected place in a single request. Adds a REST
/places/bulk-update endpoint reusing updatePlacesMany, an offline-aware repo +
store action that patches both the place pool and the day-assignment
projections, undo grouped by each place's prior category, and the i18n keys
across all locales.
2026-06-29 23:19:33 +02:00
..
2026-06-16 22:22:45 +02:00
2026-06-18 20:13:30 +02:00
2026-06-16 22:22:45 +02:00
2026-06-16 22:22:45 +02:00
2026-06-16 22:22:45 +02:00
2026-06-16 22:22:45 +02:00

@trek/shared

Single source of truth for TREK's API contracts, expressed as Zod schemas and consumed by both the server (request validation + inferred DTO types) and the client (typed requests/responses).

This package is part of the incremental NestJS + React 19 migration (see the "Brownfield Rewrite" board). It is intentionally dormant until modules start importing it — adding it changes nothing for users.

Rules

  • One folder per domain: src/<domain>/<domain>.schema.ts (+ .spec.ts).
  • Domain-agnostic building blocks live in src/common/.
  • A route is only considered migrated once its contract lives here.
  • Schemas are the source of truth; server DTOs and client types are inferred from them (z.infer<typeof schema>), never hand-duplicated.

Consumption (dev)

Both apps resolve @trek/shared to this package's TypeScript source:

  • Server (tsx): via paths in server/tsconfig.json.
  • Client (vite): via resolve.alias in client/vite.config.ts (+ paths for the type-checker).

Production packaging (Docker / workspace wiring) is introduced in card F2, when the server first depends on this package at runtime. Until then prod builds are untouched.

Not yet here

The canonical error envelope is finalised in card F5 (it must match TREK's current Express error responses byte-for-byte), so it is deliberately not invented in F1.