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response-objects
Advanced tools
Value objects representing HTTP responses
npm i -S response-objects
Requires Node.js 4+
This package is general-purpose, but is particularly useful with koa-detour. Put simply, the idea is to raise the level of abstraction by having routes or resources return objects or throw errors that represent HTTP responses, rather than imperatively doing things like res.write()
(or in Koa ctx.body = ...
)
// this isn't a complete working example, it just shows the concepts
const Koa = require("koa");
const Router = require("koa-detour");
const R = require("response-objects");
const app = new Koa()
const router = new Router();
router.route("/user", {
async GET (ctx) {
if (!areUsersConnected(ctx.userId, ctx.params.id)) {
// router handles sending this as a 403
throw R.Forbidden("You are not connected to that user")
}
// router handles sending this as a 200
return R.Ok(await getUser())
},
async POST (ctx) {
if (ctx.body.username == null) {
// router handles sending this as 400
throw R.BadRequest("Username is required");
}
// router handles sending this as a 201
return R.Created(await createUser(ctx.body));
},
})
app.use(router);
As an integration point, there is an exported MARKER
symbol value, which can be used to identify response objects produced by this library.
const R = require("response-objects");
const resp = R.Ok("it worked!");
console.log(resp[R.MARKER]); // true
Available methods:
R.Continue === R[100]
R.SwitchingProtocols === R[101]
R.Processing === R[102]
R.OK === R[200] (alias: R.Ok)
R.Created === R[201]
R.Accepted === R[202]
R.NonAuthoritativeInformation === R[203]
R.NoContent === R[204]
R.ResetContent === R[205]
R.PartialContent === R[206]
R.MultiStatus === R[207]
R.AlreadyReported === R[208]
R.IMUsed === R[226]
R.MultipleChoices === R[300]
R.MovedPermanently === R[301]
R.Found === R[302]
R.SeeOther === R[303]
R.NotModified === R[304]
R.UseProxy === R[305]
R.TemporaryRedirect === R[307]
R.PermanentRedirect === R[308]
R.BadRequest === R[400]
R.Unauthorized === R[401]
R.PaymentRequired === R[402]
R.Forbidden === R[403]
R.NotFound === R[404]
R.MethodNotAllowed === R[405]
R.NotAcceptable === R[406]
R.ProxyAuthenticationRequired === R[407]
R.RequestTimeout === R[408]
R.Conflict === R[409]
R.Gone === R[410]
R.LengthRequired === R[411]
R.PreconditionFailed === R[412]
R.PayloadTooLarge === R[413]
R.URITooLong === R[414]
R.UnsupportedMediaType === R[415]
R.RangeNotSatisfiable === R[416]
R.ExpectationFailed === R[417]
R.MisdirectedRequest === R[421]
R.UnprocessableEntity === R[422]
R.Locked === R[423]
R.FailedDependency === R[424]
R.UnorderedCollection === R[425]
R.UpgradeRequired === R[426]
R.PreconditionRequired === R[428]
R.TooManyRequests === R[429]
R.RequestHeaderFieldsTooLarge === R[431]
R.UnavailableForLegalReasons === R[451]
R.InternalServerError === R[500]
R.NotImplemented === R[501]
R.BadGateway === R[502]
R.ServiceUnavailable === R[503]
R.GatewayTimeout === R[504]
R.HTTPVersionNotSupported === R[505]
R.VariantAlsoNegotiates === R[506]
R.InsufficientStorage === R[507]
R.LoopDetected === R[508]
R.BandwidthLimitExceeded === R[509]
R.NotExtended === R[510]
R.NetworkAuthenticationRequired === R[511]
FAQs
simple value objects representing HTTP responses
The npm package response-objects receives a total of 1,082 weekly downloads. As such, response-objects popularity was classified as popular.
We found that response-objects demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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