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TypeScript Request Schema


npm package


It's time to type your HTTP requests


npm i typescript-request-schema


Motivation

API request have always the same data type: url, method, query params, body, and response. This package aim to easily define their types.

Quick example

import { Config, Response } from 'typescript-request-schema'

const schema = {
  updateArticle: {
    url: (pathParams: { id: string; }) => `/articles/${pathParams.id}`,
    method: 'PATCH',
    queryParams: {} as {
      accessToken: string;
    },
    data: {} as {
      title?: string;
      content?: string;
    },
    response: {} as {
      id: string;
      title: string;
      content: string;
      updatedAt: string;
    }
  }
}

type Schema = typeof schema
type RequestName = keyof Schema
type ExtraConfig = { ... }
type RequestConfig<T extends RequestName> = Config<T, Schema, ExtraConfig>
type RequestResponse<T extends RequestName> = Promise<Response<T, Schema>>

function request<T extends RequestName>(config: RequestConfig<T>): RequestResponse<T> {
  const { name, data, queryParams, pathParams, ...restConfig } = config
  const { url, method } = schema[name]

  ...
}

const article = await request({
  name: 'updateArticle',
  pathParams: {
    id: '...'
  },
  queryParams: {
    accessToken: '...'
  },
  data: {
    title: '...'
  }
})

It's up to you to create your own request implementation.

queryParams, data and response are only use as TypeScript type thanks to as keyword.

Full example with window.fetch

import { Config, Response, validateSchema } from 'typescript-request-schema'
import { schema } from './schema'

export const schema = {
  updateArticle: {
    url: (pathParams: { id: string; }) => `/articles/${pathParams.id}`,
    method: 'PATCH',
    queryParams: {} as {
      accessToken: string;
    },
    data: {} as {
      title?: string;
      content?: string;
    },
    response: {} as {
      id: string;
      title: string;
      content: string;
      updatedAt: string;
    }
  }
}

validateSchema(schema) // only use as TS checker

type Schema = typeof schema
type RequestName = keyof Schema
type ExtraConfig = NonNullable<Parameters<typeof fetch>[1]>
type RequestConfig<T extends RequestName> = Config<T, Schema, ExtraConfig>
type RequestResponse<T extends RequestName> = Promise<Response<T, Schema>>

function request<T extends RequestName>(config: RequestConfig<T>): RequestResponse<T> {
  const { name, data, queryParams, pathParams, ...restConfig } = config
  const { url, method } = schema[name]

  const urlWithPathParams = (typeof url === 'function' && pathParams)
    ? url(pathParams)
    : url

  const queryParamsAsString = Object.entries(queryParams || {})
    .map(([key, value]) => `${key}=${value}`)
    .join('&')

  const baseUrl = 'http://api.website.com'
  const fullUrl = `${baseUrl}${urlWithPathParams}?${queryParamsAsString}`

  return fetch(fullUrl, {
    method,
    body: data ? JSON.stringify(data) : undefined,
    ...restConfig
  }).then(res => res.json())
}

const article = await request({
  name: 'updateArticle',
  pathParams: {
    id: '...'
  },
  queryParams: {
    accessToken: '...'
  },
  data: {
    title: 'new title'
  }
})

with axios ?

It's up to you to define your own request implementation, so you can use any request library.

import axios, { AxiosRequestConfig, AxiosPromise } from 'axios'

...

type Schema = typeof schema
type RequestName = keyof Schema
type ExtraConfig = AxiosRequestConfig
type RequestConfig<T extends RequestName> = Config<T, Schema, ExtraConfig>
type RequestResponse<T extends RequestName> = AxiosPromise<Response<T, Schema>>

function request<T extends RequestName>(config: RequestConfig<T>): RequestResponse<T> {
  const { name, data, queryParams, pathParams, ...restConfig } = config
  const { url, method } = schema[name]

  const urlWithPathParams = (typeof url === 'function' && pathParams)
    ? url(pathParams)
    : url

  const baseUrl = 'http://api.website.com'

  return axios.request({
    url: `${baseUrl}${urlWithPathParams}`,
    method,
    params: queryParams,
    data,
  })
}

API

  • Config<RequestName, Schema, ExtraConfig>
  • Response<RequestName, Schema>
  • validateSchema() - use for TS check

IntelliSense examples

  • name

name

  • pathParams

name

  • queryParams

name

  • data

name

  • response

name

  • extraProperties

name

Advanced config

You can change the key of each properties

interface Conf {
  RouteNameKey: 'name';
  PathParamsKey: 'pathParams';
  QueryParamsKey: 'queryParams';
  URLKey: 'url';
  DataKey: 'data';
  ResponseKey: 'response';
  MethodKey: 'method';
}

const schema = {
  ...
}

validateSchema<Conf>(schema)

...

type RequestConfig<T extends RequestName> = Config<T, Schema, ExtraConfig, Conf>

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mix plain JavaScript object and TypeScript definition to build schema

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