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responselike
Advanced tools
Package description
The `responselike` npm package is designed to create `Response` objects that mimic HTTP response objects. This can be particularly useful in testing scenarios where you want to simulate responses from web servers without making actual HTTP requests. It allows for the creation of response-like objects with properties and methods that resemble those of real HTTP responses.
Creating a response-like object
This feature allows for the creation of a response-like object with a status code, headers, body, and URL. It's useful for simulating HTTP responses in tests.
const Response = require('responselike');
const response = new Response(200, {}, 'body', 'http://example.com');
console.log(response.statusCode); // 200
Accessing response properties
Once a response-like object is created, you can access its properties such as headers, body, and URL, similar to how you would with a real HTTP response.
console.log(response.headers); // {}
console.log(response.body); // 'body'
console.log(response.url); // 'http://example.com'
Nock is a powerful HTTP server mocking and expectations library for Node.js. Unlike `responselike`, which is focused on creating response-like objects, nock allows you to intercept HTTP requests and provide predefined responses. It's more comprehensive for testing HTTP interactions.
This package provides a way to mock HTTP requests and responses in Node.js, similar to `responselike`. However, `node-mocks-http` is more focused on providing a complete set of tools for mocking the `http` module, including both request and response objects, making it more suitable for integration testing.
Readme
A response-like object for mocking a native Node.js HTTP response
npm install --save responselike
Or if you're just using for testing you'll probably want:
npm install --save-dev responselike
Basically just a fork of ForbesLindesay/http-response-object, but with better compatibility.
MIT © Luke Childs
FAQs
A response-like object for mocking a Node.js HTTP response stream
The npm package responselike receives a total of 12,619,246 weekly downloads. As such, responselike popularity was classified as popular.
We found that responselike 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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