Rails Ranger is a thin layer on top of Axios, which gives you an opinionated interface to query APIs built with Ruby on Rails.
- URL building following Ruby on Rails routes conventions
- Automatic transformation of camelCase into snake_case and back to camelCase when exchanging data between the front-end and the API
npm install --save rails-ranger
or
yarn add rails-ranger
If you prefer a blog post, checkout our getting started guide here.
The following example illustrates a simple usage of the library:
// api-client.js
import RailsRanger from 'rails-ranger'
const config = {
axios: {
baseURL: 'http://api.myapp.com',
headers: {
'Content-Type': 'application/json',
'Accept': 'application/json'
}
}
}
export default new RailsRanger(config)
// some-front-end-component.js
import api from 'api-client'
api.list('users').then((response) => {
const users = response.data
})
The list
function makes a request to the index path of the users resource, following Rails routing conventions. This means a GET
request to the /users
path.
Also we converted the snake_cased JSON generated by Ruby on Rails automatically to camelCase, as preferred in Javascript.
Observation: you can use
api.index('users')
as well. Thelist
function is just an alias for it.
You must setup the headers correctly, passing down the content type and accept keys as application/json
(as shown in the example above) for Rails to serve the endpoint in the json format instead of presuming the HTTP default.
api.resource(users, 1).list('blogPosts', { someParameter: false })
// => GET request to /users/1/blog_posts?some_parameter=false
You can build your own client object to centralize the API routes used by your front-end app.
This is indeed recommended for non-trivial applications, to avoid duplication, allow manipulating the parameters before performing the request and make your life easier in the event of removal/replacement of this dependency from your project.
Below is an example of such implementation:
// api-client.js
import RailsRanger from 'rails-ranger'
const client = new RailsRanger
export default {
users: {
list(params) {
return client.list('users', params)
}
}
blogPosts: {
list(params) {
return client.list('blogPosts', params)
}
}
}
// some-front-end-component.js
import api from 'api-client'
api.users.list({ limit: 3 }).then((response) => {
const users = response.data
})
As the first argument when creating a new instance of Rails Ranger you can pass an object of options to customize the behavior of the client.
default: true
By default RailsRanger will convert camelCased keys in your jsons to snake_case when sending a request to Rails, and will convert the Rails response back from snake_case to camelCase for better usage within your javascript code.
You can disable this behavior by setting dataTransform
to false:
const api = new RailsRanger({ dataTransform: false })
default: {}
Any object passed to the axios
option will be handled to Axios.
Here an example using the baseUrl
configuration of Axios:
const api = new RailsRanger({ axios: { baseUrl: 'http://myapp.com/api/v1' } })
api.list('users')
// => GET request to http://myapp.com/api/users
See more configuration options in the Axios documentation
You don't need to use Rails Ranger as an ajax client if you don't want to. It can also be used just to generate the resource routes and then make the request with another tool. The following is an example of this usage:
import { RouteBuilder } from RailsRanger
const routes = new RouteBuilder
routes.create('users', { name: 'John' })
// => { path: '/users', params: { name: 'John' }, method: 'post' }
routes.show('users', { id: 1, hidePassword: true })
// => { path: '/users/1?hide_password=true', params: {}, method: 'get' }
routes.get('/:api/documentation', { api: 'v1', page: 3 })
// => { path: 'v1/documentation?page=3', params: {}, method: 'get' }
You can access your nested resources by using the .resource
function:
api.resource('users').list('blogPosts')
//=> GET request to /users/blog_posts
api.resource('users', 1).list('blogPosts')
//=> GET request to /users/1/blog_posts
The .namespace
function can help you to build a path nested within a Rails namespace:
api.namespace('users').list('blogPosts')
//=> GET request to /users/blog_posts
api.namespace('admin_roles/:type', { type: 1 }).list('blogPosts')
//=> GET request to /admin_roles/1/blog_posts
api.list('users', { limit: 3 })
// => GET request to /users?limit=3
api.index('users', { limit: 3 })
// => GET request to /users?limit=3
api.show('users', { id: 1 })
// => GET request to /users/1
api.new('users')
// => GET request to /users/new
api.create('users', { email: 'john@doe.com' })
// => POST request to /users
api.edit('users', { id: 1 })
// => GET request to /users/1/edit
api.update('users', { id: 1, name: 'John Doe' })
// => PATCH request to /users/1
api.destroy('users', { id: 1 })
// => DELETE request to /users/1
api.get('users/:id', { id: 1, hidePassword: true })
// => GET request to users/1&hide_password=true
api.post('users/:id', { id: 1, name: 'John' })
// => POST request to users/1 with a JSON payload containing: { "name": "John" }
api.patch('users/:id', { id: 1, name: 'John' })
// => PATCH request to users/1 with a JSON payload containing: { "name": "John" }
api.put('users/:id', { id: 1, name: 'John' })
// => PUT request to users/1 with a JSON payload containing: { "name": "John" }
api.delete('users/:id', { id: 1, hidePassword: true })
// => DELETE request to users/1&hide_password=true
Since rails-ranger is built on top of Axios, request cancellation works the same way.
import api from 'api-client'
import axios from 'axios';
const CancelToken = axios.CancelToken;
const source = CancelToken.source();
const request = api.get('/users/:id', {id: 1}, {cancelToken: source.token})
request.cancel = (optionalMessage) => source.cancel(optionalMessage);