npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@schickling/notion-client

v2.2.15

Published

A simple and easy to use client for the Notion API

Downloads

77

Readme

Build status npm version

Installation

npm install @schickling/notion-client

Usage

Use Notion's Getting Started Guide to get set up to use Notion's API.

Import and initialize a client using an integration token or an OAuth access token.

const { Client } = require("@schickling/notion-client")

// Initializing a client
const notion = new Client({
  auth: process.env.NOTION_TOKEN,
})

Make a request to any Notion API endpoint.

See the complete list of endpoints in the API reference.

;(async () => {
  const listUsersResponse = await notion.users.list({})
})()

Each method returns a Promise which resolves the response.

console.log(listUsersResponse)
{
  results: [
    {
      object: 'user',
      id: 'd40e767c-d7af-4b18-a86d-55c61f1e39a4',
      type: 'person',
      person: {
        email: '[email protected]',
      },
      name: 'Avocado Lovelace',
      avatar_url: 'https://secure.notion-static.com/e6a352a8-8381-44d0-a1dc-9ed80e62b53d.jpg',
    },
    ...
  ]
}

Endpoint parameters are grouped into a single object. You don't need to remember which parameters go in the path, query, or body.

const myPage = await notion.databases.query({
  database_id: "897e5a76-ae52-4b48-9fdf-e71f5945d1af",
  filter: {
    property: "Landmark",
    rich_text: {
      contains: "Bridge",
    },
  },
})

Handling errors

If the API returns an unsuccessful response, the returned Promise rejects with a APIResponseError.

The error contains properties from the response, and the most helpful is code. You can compare code to the values in the APIErrorCode object to avoid misspelling error codes.

const { Client, APIErrorCode } = require("@schickling/notion-client")

try {
  const notion = new Client({ auth: process.env.NOTION_TOKEN })
  const myPage = await notion.databases.query({
    database_id: databaseId,
    filter: {
      property: "Landmark",
      rich_text: {
        contains: "Bridge",
      },
    },
  })
} catch (error) {
  if (error.code === APIErrorCode.ObjectNotFound) {
    //
    // For example: handle by asking the user to select a different database
    //
  } else {
    // Other error handling code
    console.error(error)
  }
}

Logging

The client emits useful information to a logger. By default, it only emits warnings and errors.

If you're debugging an application, and would like the client to log response bodies, set the logLevel option to LogLevel.DEBUG.

const { Client, LogLevel } = require("@schickling/notion-client")

const notion = new Client({
  auth: process.env.NOTION_TOKEN,
  logLevel: LogLevel.DEBUG,
})

You may also set a custom logger to emit logs to a destination other than stdout. A custom logger is a function which is called with 3 parameters: logLevel, message, and extraInfo. The custom logger should not return a value.

Client options

The Client supports the following options on initialization. These options are all keys in the single constructor parameter.

| Option | Default value | Type | Description | | ----------- | -------------------------- | ------------ | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | | auth | undefined | string | Bearer token for authentication. If left undefined, the auth parameter should be set on each request. | | logLevel | LogLevel.WARN | LogLevel | Verbosity of logs the instance will produce. By default, logs are written to stdout. | | timeoutMs | 60_000 | number | Number of milliseconds to wait before emitting a RequestTimeoutError | | baseUrl | "https://api.notion.com" | string | The root URL for sending API requests. This can be changed to test with a mock server. | | logger | Log to console | Logger | A custom logging function. This function is only called when the client emits a log that is equal or greater severity than logLevel. | | agent | Default node agent | http.Agent | Used to control creation of TCP sockets. A common use is to proxy requests with https-proxy-agent |

TypeScript

This package contains type definitions for all request parameters and responses, as well as some useful sub-objects from those entities.

Because errors in TypeScript start with type any or unknown, you should use the isNotionClientError type guard to handle them in a type-safe way. Each NotionClientError type is uniquely identified by its error.code. Codes in the APIErrorCode enum are returned from the server. Codes in the ClientErrorCode enum are produced on the client.

try {
  const response = await notion.databases.query({
    /* ... */
  })
} catch (error: unknown) {
  if (isNotionClientError(error)) {
    // error is now strongly typed to NotionClientError
    switch (error.code) {
      case ClientErrorCode.RequestTimeout:
        // ...
        break
      case APIErrorCode.ObjectNotFound:
        // ...
        break
      case APIErrorCode.Unauthorized:
        // ...
        break
      // ...
      default:
        // you could even take advantage of exhaustiveness checking
        assertNever(error.code)
    }
  }
}

Type guards

There are several type guards provided to distinguish between full and partial API responses.

| Type guard function | Purpose | | ---------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | isFullPage | Determine whether an object is a full PageObjectResponse | | isFullBlock | Determine whether an object is a full BlockObjectResponse | | isFullDatabase | Determine whether an object is a full DatabaseObjectResponse | | isFullPageOrDatabase | Determine whether an object is a full PageObjectResponse or DatabaseObjectResponse | | isFullUser | Determine whether an object is a full UserObjectResponse | | isFullComment | Determine whether an object is a full CommentObjectResponse |

Here is an example of using a type guard:

const fullOrPartialPages = await notion.databases.query({
  database_id: "897e5a76-ae52-4b48-9fdf-e71f5945d1af",
})
for (const page of fullOrPartialPages.results) {
  if (!isFullPageOrDatabase(page)) {
    continue
  }
  // The page variable has been narrowed from
  //      PageObjectResponse | PartialPageObjectResponse | DatabaseObjectResponse | PartialDatabaseObjectResponse
  // to
  //      PageObjectResponse | DatabaseObjectResponse.
  console.log("Created at:", page.created_time)
}

Utility functions

This package also exports a few utility functions that are helpful for dealing with any of our paginated APIs.

iteratePaginatedAPI(listFn, firstPageArgs)

This utility turns any paginated API into an async iterator.

Parameters:

  • listFn: Any function on the Notion client that represents a paginated API (i.e. accepts start_cursor.) Example: notion.blocks.children.list.
  • firstPageArgs: Arguments that should be passed to the API on the first and subsequent calls to the API, for example a block_id.

Returns:

An async iterator over results from the API.

Example:

for await (const block of iteratePaginatedAPI(notion.blocks.children.list, {
  block_id: parentBlockId,
})) {
  // Do something with block.
}

collectPaginatedAPI(listFn, firstPageArgs)

This utility accepts the same arguments as iteratePaginatedAPI, but collects the results into an in-memory array.

Before using this utility, check that the data you are dealing with is small enough to fit in memory.

Parameters:

  • listFn: Any function on the Notion client that represents a paginated API (i.e. accepts start_cursor.) Example: notion.blocks.children.list.
  • firstPageArgs: Arguments that should be passed to the API on the first and subsequent calls to the API, for example a block_id.

Returns:

An array with results from the API.

Example:

const blocks = await collectPaginatedAPI(notion.blocks.children.list, {
  block_id: parentBlockId,
})
// Do something with blocks.

Requirements

This package supports the following minimum versions:

  • Runtime: node >= 12
  • Type definitions (optional): typescript >= 4.5

Earlier versions may still work, but we encourage people building new applications to upgrade to the current stable.

Getting help

If you want to submit a feature request for Notion's API, or are experiencing any issues with the API platform, please email us at [email protected].

To report issues with the SDK, it is possible to submit an issue to this repo. However, we don't monitor these issues very closely. We recommend you reach out to us at [email protected] instead.