@sapphire/fetch
Tiny wrapper around Node's global fetch
for improved TypeScript and data type support
Table of Contents
Description
Node has a great global fetch
(powered by undici) for making API calls, but because it focuses solely on bringing the Fetch API to Node.js, it doesn't provide specific error messages and handling for different return types (JSON, Buffer, plain text, etc). This is where @sapphire/fetch
comes in. The syntax is more restrictive than that of undici, but that makes it consistent and easier to use in TypeScript.
Features
- Written in TypeScript
- Fully tested
- Exported
enum
for the common return data types - Throws distinctive errors when the API returns a "not ok" status code to make them easier to understand
- Enforces casting the return type when requesting JSON data, to ensure your return data is strictly typed
- Uses global
fetch
, which for NodeJS is undici and for browsers is the Fetch API
Installation
You can use the following command to install this package, or replace npm install
with your package manager of choice.
npm install @sapphire/fetch
Usage
[!NOTE]
While this section uses import
, it maps 1:1 with CommonJS' require syntax. For example,
import { fetch } from '@sapphire/fetch';
is the same as
const { fetch } = require('@sapphire/fetch');
[!IMPORTANT]
When providing a serializable object to the body
option, @sapphire/fetch
will automatically call JSON.stringify
on the object. This means you can pass an object directly to the body
option without having to call JSON.stringify
yourself.
If the body is not serializable (such as a File
, Buffer
, or Blob
), the body will be sent as-is.
Serializability is calculated based on:
- If the body is
null
- If the body's
.constructor
property is undefined
- If the body's
.constructor.name
property is Object
- If the body has a function property named
toJSON
[!WARNING]
Because @sapphire/fetch
aims to be as close to global fetch as possible, it doesn't support proxy options that a library like undici does. If you want to use a proxy, you should use undici directly.
GET
ting JSON data
import { fetch, FetchResultTypes } from '@sapphire/fetch';
interface JsonPlaceholderResponse {
userId: number;
id: number;
title: string;
completed: boolean;
}
const data = await fetch<JsonPlaceholderResponse>('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/1', FetchResultTypes.JSON);
console.log(data.userId);
GET
ting Buffer data (images, etc.)
import { fetch, FetchResultTypes } from '@sapphire/fetch';
const sapphireLogo = await fetch('https://github.com/sapphiredev.png', FetchResultTypes.Buffer);
console.log(sapphireLogo);
POST
ing JSON data
import { fetch, FetchResultTypes, FetchMethods } from '@sapphire/fetch';
const responseData = await fetch(
'https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos',
{
method: FetchMethods.Post,
headers: {
'Content-Type': 'application/json'
},
body: { name: 'John Doe' }
},
FetchResultTypes.JSON
);
console.log(responseData);
Buy us some doughnuts
Sapphire Community is and always will be open source, even if we don't get donations. That being said, we know there are amazing people who may still want to donate just to show their appreciation. Thank you very much in advance!
We accept donations through Open Collective, Ko-fi, PayPal, Patreon and GitHub Sponsorships. You can use the buttons below to donate through your method of choice.
Contributors
Please make sure to read the Contributing Guide before making a pull request.
Thank you to all the people who already contributed to Sapphire!