@paquitosoft/fetcher
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1.3.0 • Public • Published

Fetcher

A simple and small (typed) library on top of fetch that is more user friendly.

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Please head to the API Docs for detailed information.

Installation

npm install @paquitosoft/fetcher

How to use it

The module exports four API functions tailored for the main HTTP Methods (GET, POST, PUT, DELETE) and also another one to tailor your request (and use other HTTP methods).

Sending a GET request

import { get } from '@paquitosoft/fetcher';

async function loadProducts() {
  const products = await get('https://fakestoreapi.com/products');
  console.log({ products });
}

// Loading and cache products for 10 minutes
async function loadAndCacheProducts() {
  const products = await get('https://fakestoreapi.com/products', {
    ttl: 10 * 60 // value is seconds
  });
  console.log({ products });
}

Sending a POST request

import { post } from '@paquitosoft/fetcher';

async function saveProduct() {
  const newProduct = {
    title: 'test product',
    price: 13.5,
    description: 'lorem ipsum set',
    image: 'https://i.pravatar.cc',
    category: 'electronic'
  };
  const persistedProduct = await post('https://fakestoreapi.com/products', newProduct);
  console.log({ persistedProduct });
}

Caching

By default fetcher uses an in-memory cache so you can avoid hitting the server for long-lived resources. This is controlled by the ttl (seconds) parameter for GET requests.

You can also provide your own custom cache manager to store values in other locations such local-storage or IndexedDB. For such situations, you would create a class/object which implements the CacheManager interface.

import { setCacheManager, get } from '@paquitosoft/fetcher';

// Define a custom cache manager
const localStorageCacheManager = {
  set(key, value, options = { ttl: 0 }) {
    const cacheEntry = {
      expires: Date.now() + ((options?.ttl || 0) * 1000),
      value
    };
    localStorage.setItem(key, JSON.stringify(cacheEntry));
  },

  get(key) {
    const cacheEntryRaw = localStorage.getItem(key);

    if (!cacheEntry) return undefined;

    const now = Date.now();
    const cacheEntry = JSON.parse(cacheEntryRaw);
    if (cacheEntry && now < cacheEntry.expires) {
      return cacheEntry.value;
    } else {
      localStorage.removeItem(key);
      return undefined;
    }
  }
};

// Tell Fetcher to use this custom manager
setCacheManager(localStorageCacheManager);

// Now fetched data will be persisted in browser's local storage
async function loadAndCacheProducts() {
  const products = await get('https://fakestoreapi.com/products', {
    ttl: 10 * 60
  });
  console.log({ products });
}

Middlewares

There might be scenarios where you would like to apply some logic before or after every request. You can achieve this by using middlewares. You would create middleware functions and register them in the fetcher module by calling the addMiddleware function.

Before request middlewares

These are just functions that receive the request meta-data and must return that meta-data with your needed modifications.

Here is an example of a middleware to add some sort of auth token to every request.

import { addMiddleware, removeMiddleware, get } from '@paquitosoft/fetcher';

// Define your middleware
function authMiddleware({ method, url, fetchOptions, ttl, body, cache }) {
  const authToken = localStorage.getItem('auth-token');
  const headers = {
    ...fetchOptions.headers,
    'Authorization': `Bearer ${authToken}`
  };
  return {
    fetchOptions: {
      ...fetchOptions,
      headers
    }
  };
}

// Tell fetcher you want to use it
addMiddleware('before', authMiddleware);

// This request would send the auth header
const shopCart = await get('https://fakestoreapi.com/carts/5');

// If you ever need to remove the middleware, you can do it like this
removeMiddleware(authMiddleware);

After request middlewares

In you ever need to modify the response from the server before it gets to your consumer, you can use an after middleware which receives the data fetched from the server (processed) and can return whatever it wants.

Here is an example where we modify the response if user is in a certain A/B experiment:

import { addMiddleware, get } from '@paquitosoft/fetcher';

// Define your middleware
function updateProductsMetaData(serverData: products) {
  const isProductsListingUrl = /\/products$/.test(url);

  if (isProductsListingUrl) {
    const isUserInExperiment = (localStorage.getItem('user-ab-engaged-experiments') || '')
      .split(',').includes('exp_001');

    if (isUserInExperiment) {
      return products.map(product => ({
        ...product,
        labels: ['NEW']
      }));
    }
  }
}

// Tell fetcher you want to use it
addMiddleware('before', updateProductsMetaData);

// Products will include the 'labels' attribute if user is in the experiment
const products = await get('https://fakestoreapi.com/products');

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    npm i @paquitosoft/fetcher

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    Version

    1.3.0

    License

    MIT

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