What is type-is?
The type-is npm package is used to determine the MIME type of the content represented by a request or response object. It can check if the content type matches any of the given MIME types, which can be useful for handling requests in web applications, especially when dealing with REST APIs or any other HTTP-based interfaces.
What are type-is's main functionalities?
Check content type
This feature allows you to check if a given content type matches one of the specified MIME types. In the code sample, it checks if 'image/png' is an image MIME type.
const typeis = require('type-is');
const contentType = 'image/png';
const result = typeis.is(contentType, ['image/*']); // returns 'image/png'
Determine if request has body
This feature checks if the request object has a body by inspecting the 'Content-Type' header.
const typeis = require('type-is');
const req = { headers: { 'content-type': 'text/html' } };
const hasBody = typeis.hasBody(req); // returns true
Determine the type of request
This feature determines the type of the request by checking if the 'Content-Type' header matches any of the provided MIME types.
const typeis = require('type-is');
const req = { headers: { 'content-type': 'application/json' } };
const result = typeis(req, ['json', 'urlencoded', 'multipart']); // returns 'json'
Other packages similar to type-is
mime-types
The mime-types package is similar to type-is in that it provides functionality for looking up MIME types based on file extensions and vice versa. However, it does not directly deal with request objects and is more focused on the mapping between MIME types and file extensions.
content-type
The content-type package is used to parse and format 'Content-Type' headers. Unlike type-is, it does not provide methods to check if a request or response matches a specific content type, but it can be used to construct and deconstruct 'Content-Type' headers.
accepts
The accepts package is designed to deal with the HTTP Accept header, allowing servers to negotiate content type with clients. It is similar to type-is in that it helps determine the type of content, but it focuses on what the client can accept, rather than what the server is receiving or sending.
type-is
Infer the content-type of a request.
Install
This is a Node.js module available through the
npm registry. Installation is done using the
npm install
command:
$ npm install type-is
API
var http = require('http')
var typeis = require('type-is')
http.createServer(function (req, res) {
var istext = typeis(req, ['text/*'])
res.end('you ' + (istext ? 'sent' : 'did not send') + ' me text')
})
typeis(request, types)
Checks if the request
is one of the types
. If the request has no body,
even if there is a Content-Type
header, then null
is returned. If the
Content-Type
header is invalid or does not matches any of the types
, then
false
is returned. Otherwise, a string of the type that matched is returned.
The request
argument is expected to be a Node.js HTTP request. The types
argument is an array of type strings.
Each type in the types
array can be one of the following:
- A file extension name such as
json
. This name will be returned if matched. - A mime type such as
application/json
. - A mime type with a wildcard such as
*/*
or */json
or application/*
.
The full mime type will be returned if matched. - A suffix such as
+json
. This can be combined with a wildcard such as
*/vnd+json
or application/*+json
. The full mime type will be returned
if matched.
Some examples to illustrate the inputs and returned value:
typeis(req, ['json'])
typeis(req, ['html', 'json'])
typeis(req, ['application/*'])
typeis(req, ['application/json'])
typeis(req, ['html'])
typeis.hasBody(request)
Returns a Boolean if the given request
has a body, regardless of the
Content-Type
header.
Having a body has no relation to how large the body is (it may be 0 bytes).
This is similar to how file existence works. If a body does exist, then this
indicates that there is data to read from the Node.js request stream.
if (typeis.hasBody(req)) {
req.on('data', function (chunk) {
})
}
typeis.is(mediaType, types)
Checks if the mediaType
is one of the types
. If the mediaType
is invalid
or does not matches any of the types
, then false
is returned. Otherwise, a
string of the type that matched is returned.
The mediaType
argument is expected to be a
media type string. The types
argument
is an array of type strings.
Each type in the types
array can be one of the following:
- A file extension name such as
json
. This name will be returned if matched. - A mime type such as
application/json
. - A mime type with a wildcard such as
*/*
or */json
or application/*
.
The full mime type will be returned if matched. - A suffix such as
+json
. This can be combined with a wildcard such as
*/vnd+json
or application/*+json
. The full mime type will be returned
if matched.
Some examples to illustrate the inputs and returned value:
var mediaType = 'application/json'
typeis.is(mediaType, ['json'])
typeis.is(mediaType, ['html', 'json'])
typeis.is(mediaType, ['application/*'])
typeis.is(mediaType, ['application/json'])
typeis.is(mediaType, ['html'])
typeis.match(expected, actual)
Match the type string expected
with actual
, taking in to account wildcards.
A wildcard can only be in the type of the subtype part of a media type and only
in the expected
value (as actual
should be the real media type to match). A
suffix can still be included even with a wildcard subtype. If an input is
malformed, false
will be returned.
typeis.match('text/html', 'text/html')
typeis.match('*/html', 'text/html')
typeis.match('text/*', 'text/html')
typeis.match('*/*', 'text/html')
typeis.match('*/*+json', 'application/x-custom+json')
typeis.normalize(type)
Normalize a type
string. This works by performing the following:
- If the
type
is not a string, false
is returned. - If the string starts with
+
(so it is a +suffix
shorthand like +json
),
then it is expanded to contain the complete wildcard notation of */*+suffix
. - If the string contains a
/
, then it is returned as the type. - Else the string is assumed to be a file extension and the mapped media type is
returned, or
false
is there is no mapping.
This includes two special mappings:
'multipart'
-> 'multipart/*'
'urlencoded'
-> 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'
Examples
Example body parser
var express = require('express')
var typeis = require('type-is')
var app = express()
app.use(function bodyParser (req, res, next) {
if (!typeis.hasBody(req)) {
return next()
}
switch (typeis(req, ['urlencoded', 'json', 'multipart'])) {
case 'urlencoded':
throw new Error('implement urlencoded body parsing')
case 'json':
throw new Error('implement json body parsing')
case 'multipart':
throw new Error('implement multipart body parsing')
default:
res.statusCode = 415
res.end()
break
}
})
License
MIT