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@tkrotoff/fetch

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A Fetch wrapper.

  • Simplifies the use of Fetch
  • Tiny: less than 200 lines of code
  • No dependencies
  • Supports Node.js & web browsers
  • Comes with test utilities
  • Fully tested (against Undici & whatwg-fetch)
  • Written in TypeScript

Why?

When using Fetch, you must write some boilerplate:

const url = 'https://example.com/profile';
const data = { username: 'example' };

try {
  const response = await fetch(url, {
    method: 'POST',
    body: JSON.stringify(data),
    headers: {
      'content-type': 'application/json'
    }
  });
  if (!response.ok) {
    throw new Error('Network response was not ok');
  }
  const json = await response.json();
  console.log('Success:', json);
} catch (e) {
  console.error('Error:', e);
}

With @tkrotoff/fetch it becomes:

try {
  const response = await postJSON(url, data).json();
  console.log('Success:', response);
} catch (e /* HttpError | TypeError | DOMException */) {
  console.error('Error:', e);
}

You don't have to worry about:

  • HTTP headers: Accept and Content-Type are already set
  • stringifying the request body
  • One await instead of two
  • No need to manually throw an exception on HTTP error status (like 404 or 500)

Usage

Examples:

npm install @tkrotoff/fetch

import { defaults, postJSON } from '@tkrotoff/fetch';

defaults.init = { /* ... */ };

const response = await postJSON(
  'https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts',
  { title: 'foo', body: 'bar', userId: 1 }
).json();

console.log(response);

Or copy-paste Http.ts into your source code.

JavaScript runtimes support

@tkrotoff/fetch supports Node.js and modern browsers

Node.js

Check examples/node

Browsers

Check examples/web

API

  • get(input: RequestInfo | URL, init?: RequestInit): ResponsePromiseWithBodyMethods

  • post(input: RequestInfo | URL, body?: BodyInit, init?: RequestInit): ResponsePromiseWithBodyMethods

  • postJSON(input: RequestInfo | URL, body: object, init?: RequestInit): ResponsePromiseWithBodyMethods

  • put(input: RequestInfo | URL, body?: BodyInit, init?: RequestInit): ResponsePromiseWithBodyMethods

  • putJSON(input: RequestInfo | URL, body: object, init?: RequestInit): ResponsePromiseWithBodyMethods

  • patch(input: RequestInfo | URL, body?: BodyInit, init?: RequestInit): ResponsePromiseWithBodyMethods

  • patchJSON(input: RequestInfo | URL, body: object, init?: RequestInit): ResponsePromiseWithBodyMethods

  • del(input: RequestInfo | URL, init?: RequestInit): ResponsePromiseWithBodyMethods

  • isJSONResponse(response: Response): boolean

ResponsePromiseWithBodyMethods being Promise<Response> with added methods from Body.

HttpError

@tkrotoff/fetch throws HttpError with response and request properties when the HTTP status code is < 200 or >= 300.

Test utilities

  • createResponsePromise(body?: BodyInit, init?: ResponseInit): ResponsePromiseWithBodyMethods

  • createJSONResponsePromise(body: object, init?: ResponseInit): ResponsePromiseWithBodyMethods

  • createHttpError(body: BodyInit, status: number, statusText?: string): HttpError

  • createJSONHttpError(body: object, status: number, statusText?: string): HttpError

HttpStatus

Instead of writing HTTP statuses as numbers 201, 403, 503... you can replace them with HttpStatus and write more explicit code:

import { HttpStatus } from '@tkrotoff/fetch';

console.log(HttpStatus._201_Created);
console.log(HttpStatus._403_Forbidden);
console.log(HttpStatus._503_ServiceUnavailable);

type HttpStatusEnum = typeof HttpStatus[keyof typeof HttpStatus];
const status: HttpStatusEnum = HttpStatus._200_OK;

Configuration

@tkrotoff/fetch exposes defaults.init that will be applied to every request.

import { defaults } from '@tkrotoff/fetch';

defaults.init.mode = 'cors';
defaults.init.credentials = 'include';

Testing

When testing your code, use createResponsePromise() and createJSONResponsePromise():

import * as Http from '@tkrotoff/fetch';

// https://github.com/aelbore/esbuild-jest/issues/26#issuecomment-968853688
// https://github.com/swc-project/swc/issues/5059
jest.mock('@tkrotoff/fetch', () => ({
  __esModule: true,
  ...jest.requireActual('@tkrotoff/fetch')
}));

test('OK', async () => {
  const mock = jest.spyOn(Http, 'get').mockImplementation(() =>
    Http.createResponsePromise('test')
  );

  const response = await Http.get(url).text();
  expect(response).toEqual('test');

  expect(mock).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(1);
  expect(mock).toHaveBeenCalledWith(url);

  mock.mockRestore();
});

test('fail', async () => {
  const mock = jest.spyOn(Http, 'get').mockImplementation(() =>
    Http.createResponsePromise(
      '<!DOCTYPE html><title>404</title>',
      { status: 404, statusText: 'Not Found' }
    )
  );

  await expect(Http.get(url).text()).rejects.toThrow('Not Found');

  expect(mock).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(1);
  expect(mock).toHaveBeenCalledWith(url);

  mock.mockRestore();
});

Other possible syntax with jest.mock instead of jest.spyOn:

import { createResponsePromise, get } from '@tkrotoff/fetch';

beforeEach(() => jest.resetAllMocks());

jest.mock('@tkrotoff/fetch', () => ({
  ...jest.requireActual('@tkrotoff/fetch'),
  get: jest.fn(),
  post: jest.fn(),
  postJSON: jest.fn(),
  put: jest.fn(),
  putJSON: jest.fn(),
  patch: jest.fn(),
  patchJSON: jest.fn(),
  del: jest.fn()
}));

test('OK', async () => {
  jest.mocked(get).mockImplementation(() =>
    createResponsePromise('test')
  );

  const response = await get(url).text();
  expect(response).toEqual('test');

  expect(get).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(1);
  expect(get).toHaveBeenCalledWith(url);
});

test('fail', async () => {
  jest.mocked(get).mockImplementation(() =>
    createResponsePromise(
      '<!DOCTYPE html><title>404</title>',
      { status: 404, statusText: 'Not Found' }
    )
  );

  await expect(get(url).text()).rejects.toThrow('Not Found');

  expect(get).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(1);
  expect(get).toHaveBeenCalledWith(url);
});

Check examples/node and examples/web.