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@tinyhttp/accepts
Advanced tools
acceptsrewrite in TypeScript.
Higher level content negotiation based on negotiator. Extracted from koa for general use.
In addition to negotiator, it allows:
(['text/html', 'application/json']) as well as
('text/html', 'application/json').json.false when no types match*pnpm i @tinyhttp/accepts
import { Accepts } from '@tinyhttp/accepts'
Create a new Accepts object for the given req.
.charset(charsets)Return the first accepted charset. If nothing in charsets is accepted, then
false is returned.
.charsets()Return the charsets that the request accepts, in the order of the client's preference (most preferred first).
.encoding(encodings)Return the first accepted encoding. If nothing in encodings is accepted, then
false is returned.
.encodings()Return the encodings that the request accepts, in the order of the client's preference (most preferred first).
.language(languages)Return the first accepted language. If nothing in languages is accepted, then
false is returned.
.languages()Return the languages that the request accepts, in the order of the client's preference (most preferred first).
.type(types)Return the first accepted type (and it is returned as the same text as what
appears in the types array). If nothing in types is accepted, then false
is returned.
The types array can contain full MIME types or file extensions. Any value that
is not a full MIME types is passed to require('mime-types').lookup.
.types()Return the types that the request accepts, in the order of the client's preference (most preferred first).
This simple example shows how to use accepts to return a different typed
respond body based on what the client wants to accept. The server lists it's
preferences in order and will get back the best match between the client and
server.
import Accepts from '@tinyhttp/accepts'
import { createServer } from 'node:http'
createServer((req, res) => {
const accept = new Accepts(req)
// the order of this list is significant; should be server preferred order
switch (accept.type(['json', 'html'])) {
case 'json':
res.setHeader('Content-Type', 'application/json')
res.write('{"hello":"world!"}')
break
case 'html':
res.setHeader('Content-Type', 'text/html')
res.write('<b>hello, world!</b>')
break
default:
// the fallback is text/plain, so no need to specify it above
res.setHeader('Content-Type', 'text/plain')
res.write('hello, world!')
break
}
res.end()
}).listen(3000)
You can test this out with the cURL program:
curl -I -H 'Accept: text/html' http://localhost:3000/
The 'accepts' package is a content negotiation library for Node.js. It provides similar functionalities to @tinyhttp/accepts, such as determining the best content type, language, encoding, and charset to respond with based on the client's request headers. It is widely used and well-documented.
The 'negotiator' package is another content negotiation library for Node.js. It provides similar functionalities to @tinyhttp/accepts, including content type, language, encoding, and charset negotiation. It is a lower-level library compared to 'accepts' and offers more granular control over the negotiation process.
FAQs
accepts rewrite in TypeScript
The npm package @tinyhttp/accepts receives a total of 292,734 weekly downloads. As such, @tinyhttp/accepts popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @tinyhttp/accepts demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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