Install:
# npm
npm i ohmyfetch
# yarn
yarn add ohmyfetch
Import:
// ESM / Typescript
import { $fetch } from 'ohmyfetch'
// CommonJS
const { $fetch } = require('ohmyfetch')
We use conditional exports to detect Node.js
and automatically use node-fetch. If globalThis.fetch
is available, will be used instead.
In order to use experimental fetch implementation from nodejs/undici, You can import from ohmyfetch/undici
.
import { $fetch } from 'ohmyfetch/undici'
On Node.js versions older than 16.5
, node-fetch will be used as the fallback.
By setting FETCH_KEEP_ALIVE
environment variable to true
, A http/https agent will be registred that keeps sockets around even when there are no outstanding requests, so they can be used for future requests without having to reestablish a TCP connection.
Note: This option can potentially introduce memory leaks. Please check node-fetch/node-fetch#1325.
$fetch
Smartly parses JSON and native values using destr and fallback to text if it fails to parse.
const { users } = await $fetch('/api/users')
You can optionally provde a different parser than destr.
// Use JSON.parse
await $fetch('/movie?lang=en', { parseResponse: JSON.parse })
// Return text as is
await $fetch('/movie?lang=en', { parseResponse: txt => txt })
$fetch
automatically stringifies request body (if an object is passed) and adds JSON Content-Type
headers (for put
, patch
and post
requests).
const { users } = await $fetch('/api/users', { method: 'POST', body: { some: 'json' } })
$fetch
Automatically throw errors when response.ok
is false
with a friendly error message and compact stack (hiding internals).
Parsed error body is available with error.data
. You may also use FetchError
type.
await $fetch('http://google.com/404')
// FetchError: 404 Not Found (http://google.com/404)
// at async main (/project/playground.ts:4:3)
In order to bypass errors as response you can use error.data
:
await $fetch(...).catch((error) => error.data)
$fetch
Automatically retries the request if an error happens. Default is 1
(except for POST
, PUT
and PATCH
methods that is 0
)
await $fetch('http://google.com/404', {
retry: 3
})
Response can be type assisted:
const article = await $fetch<Article>(`/api/article/${id}`)
// Auto complete working with article.id
By using baseURL
option, $fetch
prepends it with respecting to trailing/leading slashes and query params for baseURL using ufo:
await $fetch('/config', { baseURL })
By using params
option, $fetch
adds params to URL by preserving params in request itself using ufo:
await $fetch('/movie?lang=en', { params: { id: 123 } })
By using headers
option, $fetch
adds extra headers in addition to the request default headers:
await $fetch('/movies', {
headers: {
Accept: 'application/json',
'Cache-Control': 'no-cache'
}
})
If you need to access raw response (for headers, etc), can use $fetch.raw
:
const response = await $fetch.raw('/sushi')
// response.data
// response.headers
// ...
- All targets are exported with Module and CommonJS format and named exports
- No export is transpiled for sake of modern syntax
- You probably need to transpile
ohmyfetch
,destr
andufo
packages with babel for ES5 support
- You probably need to transpile
- You need to polyfill
fetch
global for supporting legacy browsers like using unfetch
Why export is called $fetch
instead of fetch
?
Using the same name of fetch
can be confusing since API is different but still it is a fetch so using closest possible alternative. You can however, import { fetch }
from ohmyfetch
which is auto polyfilled for Node.js and using native otherwise.
Why not having default export?
Default exports are always risky to be mixed with CommonJS exports.
This also guarantees we can introduce more utils without breaking the package and also encourage using $fetch
name.
Why not transpiled?
By keep transpiling libraries we push web backward with legacy code which is unneeded for most of the users.
If you need to support legacy users, you can optionally transpile the library in your build pipeline.
MIT. Made with 💖