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path-proxy

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    path-proxy

A path proxy object constructor


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path-proxy

Given an group of paths (say, from an API schema), you might need to create a set of proxy objects for interacting with those paths. This is the situation I found myself in while working on the Node client for the Heroku API.

Given a set of paths and a base constructor function, path-proxy will create a network of logical proxy objects based on the paths and attach it to the constructor's prototype.

Install

npm install path-proxy --save

Usage

var pathProxy = require('path-proxy');

function ApiClient() {}

pathProxy.proxy(ApiClient, [
  "/foo",
  "/foo/{id}/bar"
]);

var client = new ApiClient();
client.foo("qux").bar();

This may not appear all that useful—they're mostly just empty functions—until you start mucking around with their prototypes:

var BarProxy = pathProxy.pathProxy(ApiClient, "/foo/{id}/bar");
BarProxy.prototype.sayHello = function () {
  console.log("hello");
};

client.foo("qux").bar().sayHello(); // Logs "hello".

They also have access to a few useful attributes:

var baz = client.foo("qux").bar("baz");
baz.params;       // ["qux", "baz"]
baz.pathSegments; // ["foo", "qux", "bar", "baz"]
baz.path;         // "/foo/qux/bar/baz"

And can access the instance of the base constructor they're based off of:

ApiClient.prototype.delete = function (path, callback) {
  var message = this.name + " deleted at " + path;
  callback(message);
};

var client = new ApiClient();
client.name = "Jonathan";

BarProxy.prototype.delete = function (callback) {
  this.base.delete(this.path, callback);
};

// This:
client.foo("qux").bar("baz").delete(function (message) {
  // message == "Jonathan deleted at /foo/qux/bar/baz"
});

// Is equivalent to this:
client.delete("/foo/qux/bar/baz", function (message) {
  // message == "Jonathan deleted at /foo/qux/bar/baz"
});

Tests

path-proxy uses jasmine-node for tests. To run them:

$ npm install
$ npm test

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Last updated on 09 Jan 2014

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