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http-fetch-decorator

v1.1.0

Published

Decorator that wraps the fetch interface for retrieving JSON data

Downloads

1

Readme

HTTP Fetch Decorator

Simple Fetch interface decorator wrapper for your functions.

$ npm install http-fetch-decorator

Signature

Then you can place the decorator which has the same input structure as the fetch function. The parameters of the request or the data to send as a body are passed via arguments to the wrapped function, and the result and error objects are available as parameters of the function as well:

@Fetch(Url: String, initObj?: Object)
static wrappedFunction(params: Object, result? : Response, err? : any){
  ...
}

How to use it

import Fetch from "http-fetch-decorator"

class AnyES6Class {
  @Fetch("apiexample/getsomething", {method: 'GET',mode:'cors'})
  static parseResponse({id: '1'},result,err) {
    if(err) throw err;
    //Result contains the Response object from fetch, then you can parse it as a json for example
    return result.json()
      .then(data => {
        //Do something with the data
      })
      .catch(err =>{
        throw err;
      })
  }
}

You can encapsulate the decorator into another decorator, for example when you want a fetch function with a specific set of options (that is reusable). For example, imagine that you want to make a POST request but you don't want to specify the mode on the options each time, you can make something like:

const Post = url => Fetch(url, { method: 'POST' });

@Post("apiexample/postsomething")
static postBook({title: 'Amazing Book', ISBN: '12434'},result,err) {
  ...
}

Credits

[@k1r0s] This small utility was made possible due to kaop-ts which provides hooks to attach behaviors on ES6 classes.