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odata-itc

v1.0.2

Published

Custom implementation of o.js for ITC

Downloads

2

Readme

o.js

o.js is a isomorphic Odata Javascript library to simplify the request of data. The main goal is to build a standalone, lightweight and easy to understand Odata lib.

Install

npm install odata

Or you can use npm install o.js which will resolve the same package

Usage in browser

In a module or Typescript

import { o } from 'odata';

(async () => {
  // chaining
  const data1 = await o('http://my.url')
    .get('resource')
    .query({ $top: 3 });

  // handler
  const oHandler = o('http://my.url');
  const data2 = await oHandler
    .get('resource')
    .query({ $top: 3 });
})();

Or in a script tag

<script src="node_modules/odata/dist/umd/o.js">

It's then placed on the window.odata:

window.odata
  .o('http://my.url')
  .get('resource')
  .query({ $top: 3 })
  .then(function (data) {});

Usage in node

const o = require('odata');

// promise example
o('http://my.url')
  .get('resource')
  .then((data) => console.log(data));

CRUD examples

The following examples using async/await but for simplicity we removed the async deceleration. To make that work this example must be wrapped in an async function or use promise.

Create (POST):

const data = {
  FirstName: "Bar",
  LastName: "Foo",
  UserName: "foobar",
}

const response = await o('http://my.url')
  .post('User', data)
  .query(); 

console.log(response); // E.g. the user 

Read (GET):

const response = await o('http://my.url')
  .get('User')
  .query({$filter: `UserName eq 'foobar'`}); 

console.log(response); // If one -> the exact user, otherwise an array of users

Update (Patch):

const data = {
  FirstName: 'John'
}

const response = await o('http://my.url')
  .patch(`User('foobar')`, data)
  .query(); 

console.log(response); // The result of the patch, e.g. the status code

Delete:

const response = await o('http://my.url')
  .delete(`User('foobar')`)
  .query(); 

console.log(response); // The status code

Options

You can pass as a second option into the o constructor options. The signature is:

function o(rootUrl: string | URL, config?: OdataConfig | any)

Basic configuration is based on RequestInit and additional odata config. By default o.js sets the following values:

{
    batch: {
      changsetBoundaryPrefix: "changset_",
      endpoint: "$batch",
      headers: new Headers({
        "Content-Type": "multipart/mixed",
      }),
      useChangset: false,
    },
    boundaryPrefix: "batch_",
    credentials: "omit",
    fragment: "value",
    headers: new Headers({
      "Content-Type": "application/json",
    }),
    mode: "cors",
    redirect: "follow",
    referrer: "client",
  }

Query

The following query options are supported by query(), fetch() and batch() by simply adding them as object:

$filter?: string;
$orderby?: string;
$expand?: string;
$select?: string;

$skip?: number;
$top?: number;
$count?: boolean;
$search?: string;
$format?: string;
$compute?: string;
$index?: number;
[key: string]: any; // allows to add anything that is missing

The queries are always attached as the URLSearchParams.

Just fetching

The lib tries to parse the data on each request. Sometimes that is not wanted (e.g. when you need a status-code or need to access odata meta data), therefor you can use the .fetch method that acts like the default fetch.

Batching

By default o.js request chained request in sequent. You can batch them together by using batch(). They are then send to the defined batch endpoint in the config. Changsets are at the moment in a experimental phase and needs to be enabled in the config.

Polyfills

Polyfills are automatically added for fetch() and URL() if needed. The automatic polyfilling can be disabled in the options.