Awesome
<p align="center" style="padding-top: 40px"> <img src="./images/logo.svg?sanitize=true" width="120" alt="logo" /> </p> <h1 align="center" style="text-align: center">KEQ</h1>Keq is a request API write by Typescript for flexibility, readability, and a low learning curve. It also works with Node.js! Keq wraps the Fetch APIs, adding chain calls and middleware functions.
Simple Usage
<!-- usage -->Send Request
A request can be initiated by invoking the appropriate method on the request object,
then calling .then()
(or .end()
or await
) to send the request.
For example a simple GET request:
import { request } from "keq";
const body = await request
.get("/search")
.set("X-Origin-Host", "https://example.com")
.query("key1", "value1");
Request can be initiated by:
import { request } from "keq";
const body = await request({
url: "/search",
method: "get",
});
Absolute URLs can be used. In web browsers absolute URLs work only if the server implements CORS.
import { request } from "keq";
const body = await request.get("https://example.com/search");
DELETE, HEAD, PATCH, POST, and PUT requests can also be used, simply change the method name:
import { request } from "keq";
await request.head("https://example.com/search");
await request.patch("https://example.com/search");
await request.post("https://example.com/search");
await request.put("https://example.com/search");
await request.delete("https://example.com/search");
await request.del("https://example.com/search");
.del()
is the alias of.delete()
.
Keq
will parse body
according to the Content-Type
of Response
and return undefined
if Content-Type
not found.
Add invoke .resolveWith('response')
to get the origin Response
Object.
import { request } from "keq";
const response = await request
.get("http://test.com")
.resolve('response')
const body = await response.json();
We will introduce resolveWith
in more detail later.
Keq
won't auto parse body, if response.status is 204. The HTTP 204 No Content success status response code indicates that server has fulfilled the request but does not need to return an entity-body, and might want to return updated meta information
Setting header fields
Setting header fields is simple, invoke .set()
with a field name and value:
import { request } from "keq";
await request
.get("/search")
.set("X-Origin-Host", "https://example.com")
.set("Accept", "application/json");
You may also pass an object or Headers
to set several fields in a single call:
import { request } from "keq";
await request
.get("/search")
.set({
"X-Origin-Host": "https://example.com",
Accept: "application/json",
});
Request query
The .query()
method accepts objects,
which when used with the GET method will form a query-string.
The following will produce the path /search?query=Manny&range=1..5&order=desc.
import { request } from "keq";
await request
.get("/search")
.query({ query: "Manny" })
.query({ range: "1..5" })
.query("order", "desc");
Or as a single object:
import { request } from "keq";
await request
.get("/search")
.query({ query: "Manny", range: "1..5", order: "desc" });
Request routing parameters
The .params()
method accepts key and value, which when used for the request with routing parameters.
import { request } from "keq";
await request
// request to /users/jack/books/kafka
.get("/users/:userName/books/{bookName}")
.params("userName", 'jack');
.params("bookName", "kafka");
// or invoke with an object
.params({
"userName": "jack",
"bookName": "kafka"
})
JSON Request
A typical JSON POST request might look a little like the following,
where we set the Content-Type
header field appropriately:
import { request } from "keq";
await request
.post("/user")
.set("Content-Type", "application/json")
.send({ name: "tj", pet: "tobi" });
When passed an object
to .send()
, it will auto set Content-Type
to application/json
x-www-form-urlencoded Request
A typical Form POST request might look a little like the following:
import { request } from "keq";
await request
.post("/user")
.type("form")
.send({ name: "tj", pet: "tobi" })
.send("pet=tobi");
To send the data as application/x-www-form-urlencoded
simply invoke .type()
with "form".
When passed an string
to .send()
, it will auto set Content-Type
to application/x-www-form-urlencoded
.
When calling
.send ()
multiple times, the value ofContent-Type
will only be set when the first calling.send ()
.
Form-Data Request
A typical Form POST request might look a little like the following:
import { request } from "keq";
const form = new FormData();
form.append("name", "tj");
form.append("pet", "tobi");
// prettier-ignore
await request
.post("/user")
.type("form-data")
.send(form)
When passed an FormData
object to .send()
, it will auto set Content-Type
to multipart/form-data
.
You can append field by invoke .field()
and .attach()
import { request } from "keq";
await request
.post("/user")
.field("name", "tj")
.field("pet", "tobi")
.attach("file", new Blob(["I am tj"]));
Setting the Content-Type
The obvious solution is to use the .set() method:
import { request } from "keq";
// prettier-ignore
await request
.post("/user")
.set("Content-Type", "application/json")
As a short-hand the .type() method is also available, accepting the canonicalized MIME type name complete with type/subtype, or simply the extension name such as "xml", "json", "png", etc:
import { request } from "keq";
await request
.post("/user")
.type("json");
Shorthand | Mime Type |
---|---|
json, xml | application/json, application/xml |
form | application/x-www-form-urlencoded |
html, css | text/html, text/css |
form-data | multipart/form-data |
jpeg, bmp, apng, gif, x-icon, png, webp, tiff | image/jpeg, image/bmp, image/apng, image/gif, image/x-icon, image/png, image/webp, image/tiff |
svg | image/svg+xml |
Set Request Redirect mode
Follow redirect by default, invoke .redirect(mode)
to set the redirect mode. Allow values are "error"
, "manual"
and "follow"
.
import { request } from "keq";
await request
.get("http://test.com")
.redirect("manual");
Set Request Credentials And Mode
These two parameters are used to control cross-domain requests.
import { request } from "keq";
await request
.get("http://test.com")
.mode("cors")
.credentials("include");
resolve responseBody
It was mentioned before that Keq
will automatically parses the response body.
And we can control the parsing behavior by calling .resolveWith(method)
.
There are multiple parsing methods for us to choose from
method | description |
---|---|
.resolveWith('intelligent') | It is the default method of Keq . This will returned context.output first if it exists. Otherwise return undefined when the response status is 204. Or return parsed response body according to the Content-Type of Response . |
.resolveWith('response') | Return Response . |
.resolveWith('text') | Return response.text() . |
.resolveWith('json') | Return response.json() . |
.resolveWith('form-data') | Return response.formData() . |
.resolveWith('blob') | Return response.blob() . |
.resolveWith('array-buffer') | Return response.arrayBuffer() |
See more usage in the Document
Contributing & Development
If there is any doubt, it is very welcome to discuss the issue together.