Fable bindings for Browsers' Fetch API.
If you need helpers for automatic JSON serialization, check Thoth.Fetch.
- Run tests:
npm test
- Publish:
npm run publish
(first bump version in RELEASE_NOTES.md and put your Nuget key in NUGET_KEY env var)
type IUser =
abstract name: string
let fetchGitHubUser accessToken =
async {
let! response =
fetch "https://api.github.com/user" [
requestHeaders [
HttpRequestHeaders.Authorization $"token {accessToken}"
] ] |> Async.AwaitPromise
let! item = response.json<IUser>() |> Async.AwaitPromise
}
Response Usage
Normally you don't need to use Response manually but, if you are in a service worker and intercepting fetch requests, you can programatically create responses that satisfy your logic, there are a few javascript runtimes that also offer http frameworks that work with responses directly so here is a few ways to create responses
Response.create("Hello World!", [Status 200; ])
Response.create("Teapot!", [Status 418; Headers [| "x-tea", "green" |] ])
Response.create("Bad Request!", [Status 400; Headers [| "x-custom", "fable" |] ])
Response.create("""{ "message": "Bad Request!" }""", [Status 400; Headers [| "content-type", "application/json" |] ])
Response.create(
Blob.Create([| csvfile |], unbox {| ``type`` = "text/csv" |}),
[ Status 200; Headers ["content-type", "text/csv"] ]
)
Check the tests for other examples.