conjure-typescript
CLI to generate TypeScript Interfaces and clients from Conjure API definitions.
Overview
The generated clients provide a simple Promise based interface for executing strongly typed remote procedure calls from
the browser or node.
Usage
The recommended way to use conjure-typescript is via a build tool like gradle-conjure.
However, if you don't want to use gradle-conjure, there is also an executable which conforms to RFC 002, published on bintray.
conjure-typescript generate <input> <output> [..Options]
Generate TypeScript bindings for a Conjure API
Positionals:
input The location of the API IR
output The output directory for the generated code
Options:
--version Show version number [boolean]
--help Show help [boolean]
--packageVersion The version of the generated package [string]
--packageName The name of the generated package [string]
--nodeCompatibleModules Generate node compatible javascript [boolean] [default: false]
--rawSource Generate raw source without any package metadata [boolean] [default: false]
--productDependencies Path to a file containing a list of product dependencies [string]
SemVer releases
This project is versioned according to SemVer. We consider the generated code to be part of
the 'public API' of conjure-typescript, i.e. TypeScript generated by old conjure-typescript and new
conjure-typescript (within a major version) should be compatible, so your consumers should be able to upgrade without compilation problems.
We also consider the command line interface and feature flags to be public API.
Example generated objects
-
Conjure object: ManyFieldExample
Objects can easily be instantiated:
const example: ManyFieldExample = {
string: "foo",
integer: 123,
optionalItem: "bar",
items: []
}
-
Conjure union: UnionTypeExample
Union types can be one of a few variants. To interact with a union value, users should use the .accept
method and define a Visitor that handles each of the possible variants, including the possibility of an unknown variant.
const unionExample = IUnionTypeExample.string("Hello, world");
const output = IUnionTypeExample.visit(unionExample, {
string: (value: string) => {
},
set: (value: string[]) => {},
unknown: (unknownType: IUnionTypeExample) => {}
});
Visitors may seem clunky in TypeScript, but they have the upside of compile-time assurance that you've handled all the possible variants. If you upgrade an API dependency and the API author added a new variant, the TypeScript compiler will force you to explicitly deal with this new variant. We intentionally avoid switch
statements.
We also generate type-guards:
if (IUnionTypeExample.isString(unionTypeExample)) {
const inner: string = unionTypeExample.string;
}
-
Conjure enum: EnumExample
conjure-typescript leverages TypeScript's string Enums.
export enum EnumExample {
ONE = "ONE",
TWO = "TWO"
}
console.log(EnumExample.ONE);
-
Conjure alias
TypeScript uses structural (duck-typing) so aliases are currently elided.
Example Client interfaces
Example service interface: PrimitiveService
export interface IPrimitiveService {
getPrimitive(): Promise<number>;
}
export class PrimitiveService {
public getPrimitive(): Promise<number> {
return this.bridge.callEndpoint<number>({
endpointName: "getPrimitive",
endpointPath: "/getPrimitive",
method: "GET",
requestMediaType: MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON,
responseMediaType: MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON,
});
}
}
Constructing clients
Use clients from conjure-typescript-runtime which configures the browser's
Fetch API with sensible defaults:
import { DefaultHttpApiBridge } from "conjure-client";
const recipes = new RecipeBookService(new DefaultHttpApiBridge({
baseUrl: "https://some.base.url.com",
userAgent: {
productName: "yourProductName",
productVersion: "1.0.0"
}
}));
const results: Recipe[] = await recipes.getRecipes();
Contributing
For instructions on how to set up your local development environment, check out the Contributing document.
License
This project is made available under the Apache 2.0 License.