timkindberg / core

2 KB library to organize your APIs in a smart way

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apicase-core

2 KB library to organize your APIs in a smart way.

Introduction

There are so many questions about how to good organize work with API in frontend applications
Some people just don't care about and use native fetch, but it's not so flexible and extensible
Some people create their own wrappers (some classes or just functions, or json objects, no matter), but it often becomes unusable in another projects because it was made for specific APIs
In addition, there's another problem - work API is often not separated from application to isolated layer. It means that you can't use your APIs with different projects or with different frameworks
Here is apicase - unified way to create a separated API layer.

General features

  • events-based requests handling
  • middlewares to update/change-on-fly/undo/redo API calls
  • adapters instead of concrete tools (fetch/xhr)
  • services with unlimited inheritance

Documentation

Full docs

Read on gitbook

Basic request

Wrap adapter into apicase method and use it like it's Axios

import { apicase } from '@apicase/core'
import fetch from '@apicase/adapter-fetch'

const doRequest = apicase(fetch)

const { success, result } = await doRequest({
  url: '/api/posts/:id',
  method: 'POST'
  params: { id: 1 },
  body: {
    title: 'Hello',
    text: 'This is Apicase'
  },
  headers: {
    token: localStorage.getItem('token')
  }
})

if (success) {
  console.log('Yay!', result)
} else {
  console.log('Hey...', result)
}

Events-based requests handling

Following "Business logic failures are not exceptions" principle,
Apicase separates error handling from request fails:

doRequest({ url: '/api/posts' })
  .on('done',  res => { console.log('Done', res) })
  .on('fail',  res => { console.log('Fail', res) })
  .on('error', err => { console.error(err) })

Apicase services

Move your API logic outside the main application code

import { ApiService } from '@apicase/core'
import fetch from '@apicase/adapter-fetch'

const ApiRoot = new ApiService(fetch, { url: '/api' })
  .on('done', logSucccess)
  .on('fail', logFailure)

const AuthService = ApiRoot
  .extend({ url: 'auth' })
  .on('done', res => { 
    localStorage.setItem('token', res.body.token) 
   })
   
AuthService.doRequest({
  body: { login: 'Apicase', password: '*****' }
})

Request queues

Keep correct order of requests using queues

import { ApiQueue } from '@apicase/core'

const queue = new ApiQueue()

queue.push(SendMessage.doRequest, { body: { message: 'that stuff' } })
queue.push(SendMessage.doRequest, { body: { message: 'really' } })
queue.push(SendMessage.doRequest, { body: { message: 'works' } })

TODO

  • Complete adapter-fetch and adapter-xhr
  • Complete ApiQueue
  • Improve debugging
  • Rewrite tests for actual version
  • Rewrite apicase-services
  • Create apicase-devtools

Author

Anton Kosykh

License

MIT

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2 KB library to organize your APIs in a smart way


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