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o.js is a isomorphic Odata Javascript library to simplify the request of data. The main goal is to build a standalone, lightweight and easy to understand Odata lib.
o.js is a isomorphic Odata Javascript library to simplify the request of data. The main goal is to build a standalone, lightweight and easy to understand Odata lib.
npm install odata
Or you can use
npm install o.js
which will resolve the same package
import { o } from 'odata';
(async () => {
// chaining
const data1 = await o('http://my.url')
.get('resource')
.query({ $top: 3 });
// handler
const oHandler = o('http://my.url');
const data2 = await oHandler
.get('resource')
.query({ $top: 3 });
})();
<script src="node_modules/odata/dist/umd/o.js">
It's then placed on the window.odata
:
window.odata
.o('http://my.url')
.get('resource')
.query({ $top: 3 })
.then(function (data) {});
const o = require('odata').o;
// promise example
o('http://my.url')
.get('resource')
.then((data) => console.log(data));
The following examples using async/await but for simplicity we removed the async deceleration. To make that work this example must be wrapped in an async function or use promise.
const data = {
FirstName: "Bar",
LastName: "Foo",
UserName: "foobar",
}
const response = await o('http://my.url')
.post('User', data)
.query();
console.log(response); // E.g. the user
const response = await o('http://my.url')
.get('User')
.query({$filter: `UserName eq 'foobar'`});
console.log(response); // If one -> the exact user, otherwise an array of users
const data = {
FirstName: 'John'
}
const response = await o('http://my.url')
.patch(`User('foobar')`, data)
.query();
console.log(response); // The result of the patch, e.g. the status code
const response = await o('http://my.url')
.delete(`User('foobar')`)
.query();
console.log(response); // The status code
You can pass as a second option into the o
constructor options. The signature is:
function o(rootUrl: string | URL, config?: OdataConfig | any)
The rootUrl
can be used to directly query a resource:
o('http://my.url/some-resource').query().then();
But mostly better is to create a handler with a rootUrl
in the configuration. Then you are able to use the handler multiple times:
const oHandler = o('', { rootUrl: 'http://my.url' });
// requesting http://my.url/some-resource
oHandler.get('some-resource').query().then();
When creating a oHandler with a configured rootUrl
in config and as first property, the two are getting merged:
const oHandler = o('v1', { rootUrl: 'http://my.url' });
// requesting http://my.url/v1/some-resource
oHandler.get('some-resource').query().then();
In a browser you can also use only a resource and the rootUrl
tries pointing to the current browser:
const oHandler = o('v1');
// requesting http://current-url/v1/some-resource
oHandler.get('some-resource').query().then();
Basic configuration is based on RequestInit and additional odata config. By default o.js sets the following values:
{
batch: {
boundaryPrefix: "batch_",
changsetBoundaryPrefix: "changset_",
endpoint: "$batch",
headers: new Headers({
"Content-Type": "multipart/mixed",
}),
useChangset: false,
useRelativeURLs: false,
},
credentials: "omit",
fragment: "value",
headers: new Headers({
"Content-Type": "application/json",
}),
mode: "cors",
redirect: "follow",
referrer: "client",
onStart: () => null,
onFinish: () => null,
onError: () => null,
}
Since version 2.0.0 we support the use of odata-query. You can simply add a
buildQuery
property to anyquery()
andfetch()
request (if only used as filter):
import buildQuery from 'odata-query'
const filter = {
not: {
and:[
{ SomeProp: 1 },
{ AnotherProp: 2 }
]
}
};
// using only filter in query() or fetch():
oHandler.get('People')
.query(buildQuery({ filter }))
.then((filteredPeople) => {});
// using more features of odata-query in get:
oHandler.get('People' + buildQuery({ filter, key: 1, top: 10 }))
.query()
.then((filteredPeople) => {});
``
The following query options are supported by `query()`, `fetch()` and `batch()` by simply adding them as object:
```typescript
$filter?: string;
$orderby?: string;
$expand?: string;
$select?: string;
$skip?: number;
$top?: number;
$count?: boolean;
$search?: string;
$format?: string;
$compute?: string;
$index?: number;
[key: string]: any; // allows to add anything that is missing
The $count flag will add an inline count property as metadata to a query response. In order to just retrieve the count, you'll have query the $count resource, such as
oHandler.get('People/$count').query().then((count) => {})
The queries are always attached as the URLSearchParams.
The lib tries to parse the data on each request. Sometimes that is not wanted (e.g. when you need a status-code or need to access odata meta data), therefor you can use the .fetch
method that acts like the default fetch.
By default o.js chains request in sequent. You can batch them together by using batch()
. They are then send to the defined batch endpoint in the config. Changsets are at the moment in a experimental phase and needs to be enabled in the config.
If you like polyfills to support IE11 please include the dist/umd/o.polyfill.js
file. Version < 2 adds polyfills for node automatically. Version 2.0.0 and bigger only supports node 18 and higher where fetch and URL is included.
FAQs
o.js is a isomorphic Odata Javascript library to simplify the request of data. The main goal is to build a standalone, lightweight and easy to understand Odata lib.
The npm package odata receives a total of 1,755 weekly downloads. As such, odata popularity was classified as popular.
We found that odata 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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