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A supply chain attack has been detected in versions 1.95.6 and 1.95.7 of the popular @solana/web3.js library.
@medplum/core
Advanced tools
The Medplum JS Client Library is a pure TypeScript library for calling a FHIR server from the browser.
Add as a dependency:
npm install @medplum/core
Create a new MedplumClient
:
import { MedplumClient } from '@medplum/core';
const medplum = new MedplumClient();
Create a MedplumClient
with additional configuration options:
import { MedplumClient } from '@medplum/core';
const medplum = new MedplumClient({
baseUrl: 'https://www.example.com/fhir/R4/',
clientId: 'MY_CLIENT_ID',
});
const medplum = new MedplumClient();
await medplum.startClientLogin(MY_CLIENT_ID, MY_CLIENT_SECRET);
If you are using Medplum as your FHIR server, you can use a direct sign-in API to authenticate email and password.
Before you begin
After that, you can use the startLogin()
method:
const loginResult = await medplum.startLogin({ email, password, remember });
const profile = await medplum.processCode(loginResult.code);
console.log(profile);
Authenticate with a FHIR server via OAuth2 redirect:
medplum.signInWithRedirect().then((user) => console.log(user));
Search for any resource using a FHIR search string:
search<K extends ResourceType>(
resourceType: K,
query?: URLSearchParams | string,
options: RequestInit = {}
): ReadablePromise<Bundle<ExtractResource<K>>>
Example:
const bundle = await medplum.search('Patient', 'given=eve');
bundle.entry.forEach((entry) => console.log(entry.resource));
createResource<T extends Resource>(resource: T): Promise<T>
Example:
medplum.createResource({
resourceType: 'Observation',
subject: {
reference: 'Patient/123',
},
valueQuantity: {
// ...
},
// ...
});
readResource<T extends Resource>(resourceType: string, id: string): Promise<T>
Example:
const patient = await medplum.readResource('Patient', '123');
readHistory<T extends Resource>(resourceType: string, id: string): Promise<Bundle<T>>
Example:
const historyBundle = await medplum.readHistory('Patient', '123');
readVersion<T extends Resource>(resourceType: string, id: string, vid: string): Promise<T>
Example:
const version = await medplum.readVersion('Patient', '123', '456');
updateResource<T extends Resource>(resource: T): Promise<T>
Example:
const result = await medplum.updateResource({
resourceType: 'Patient',
id: '123',
name: [
{
family: 'Smith',
given: ['John'],
},
],
});
console.log(result.meta.versionId);
deleteResource(resourceType: string, id: string): Promise<any>
Example:
await medplum.deleteResource('Patient', '123');
patchResource<T extends Resource>(resourceType: string, id: string, operations: Operation[]): Promise<T>
Example:
const result = await medplum.patchResource('Patient', '123', [
{ op: 'replace', path: '/name/0/family', value: 'Smith' },
]);
console.log(result.meta.versionId);
graphql(query: string, options?: RequestInit): Promise<any>
Example:
const result = await graphql(`
{
PatientList(name: "Alice") {
name {
given
family
}
}
}
`);
Medplum is a healthcare platform that helps you quickly develop high-quality compliant applications. Medplum includes a FHIR server, React component library, and developer app.
Apache 2.0. Copyright © Medplum 2024
FAQs
Medplum TS/JS Library
The npm package @medplum/core receives a total of 8,788 weekly downloads. As such, @medplum/core popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @medplum/core demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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