bungie-api-ts
v5.1.0
Published
TypeScript mappings for the Bungie.net API
Downloads
4,399
Readme
Bungie API TypeScript support
This project implements TypeScript definitions and API helpers for the Bungie.net API. It's meant for use in Destiny Item Manager, but should be general enough to use in any project. The code is completely generated from Bungie's documentation - I considered using something like Swagger Codegen, but instead opted for a custom generator so we could make the result as nice as possible.
Ports
Feel free to fork this and use it to generate for your favorite language!
Install
yarn add bungie-api-ts
Interfaces and Enums
All the interface type definitions and enums are for type info only - everything will compile out. Only the API helpers produce real JavaScript output. You can import types from each service defined on Bungie.net:
import { DestinyInventoryComponent, DestinyInventoryItemDefinition } from 'bungie-api-ts/destiny2';
There are definitions for every type defined in the Bungie.net services. See their documentation for a list - the interface names are the last part of the full name (for example, Destiny.Definitions.DestinyVendorActionDefinition
becomes DestinyVendorActionDefinition
). There are a few exceptions, like SingleComponentResponseOfDestinyInventoryComponent
, which have been mapped into nicer forms like SingleComponentResponse<DestinyInventoryComponent>
, and the server responses, which are now ServerResponse<T>
instead of something like DestinyCharacterResponse
.
API Helpers
In addition to the types, there are also simple helper functions for each API endpoint. They define the inputs and outputs to that endpoint, and will call a user-provided function with HTTP request info that you can then use to make an HTTP request. This pattern was used so the API helpers could provide full type information. These helpers are not a full API client - they assist in building one. An example:
import { getProfile, HttpClientConfig } from 'bungie-api-ts/destiny2';
async function $http(config: HttpClientConfig) {
// fill in the API key, handle OAuth, etc., then make an HTTP request using the config.
return fetch(config.url, ...);
}
const profileInfo: ServerResponse<DestinyProfileResponse> = await getProfile($http, {
components: [DestinyComponentType.Profiles, DestinyComponentType.Characters],
destinyMembershipId: 12345,
membershipType: BungieMembershipType.TigerPsn
});
Imports
It is possible to import all services from bungie-api-ts
directly, but it's better to import the specific service and pick out what you want:
// good
import { getProfile, HttpClientConfig } from 'bungie-api-ts/destiny2';
getProfile(...);
// works, but not as good
import { Destiny2 } from 'bungie-api-ts';
Destiny2.getProfile(...);
Manifest Helpers
The destiny2
import also contains helpers for typing and downloading the Destiny manifest:
import { getDestinyManifestSlice } from 'bungie-api-ts/destiny2';
async function $http(config: HttpClientConfig) {
// fill in the API key, handle OAuth, etc., then make an HTTP request using the config.
return fetch(config.url, ...);
}
const destinyManifest = await getDestinyManifest($http);
const manifestTables = getDestinyManifestSlice($http, {
destinyManifest,
tableNames: ['DestinyInventoryItemDefinition', 'DestinySocketDefinition'],
language: 'en',
});
// manifestTables is an object with properties DestinyInventoryItemDefinition and DestinySocketDefinition
Build
# setup
yarn && yarn submodule
# run
yarn start
Updating API sources
Run the update API sources GitHub Action and it should create a new PR for the updated sources.
Publishing
Update the version in package.json
, and when the PR merges to master
, a GitHub workflow will automatically publish to NPM. Don't forget to run yarn start
and commit all changed files!