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Angular 2 JSON API

A lightweight Angular 2 adapter for JSON API

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Table of Contents

Introduction

Why this library? Because JSON API is an awesome standard, but the responses that you get and the way to interact with endpoints are not really easy and directly consumable from Angular.

Moreover, using Angular2 and Typescript, we like to interact with classes and models, not with bare JSONs. Thanks to this library, you will be able to map all your data into models and relationships like these:

[
    Post{
        id: 1,
        title: 'My post',
        content: 'My content',
        comments: [
            Comment{
                id: 1,
                // ...
            },
            Comment{
                id: 2,
                // ...
            }
        ]
    },
    // ...
]

Installation

To install this library, run:

$ npm install angular2-jsonapi --save

Add the JsonApiModule to your app module imports:

import { JsonApiModule } from 'angular2-jsonapi';

@NgModule({
  imports: [
    BrowserModule,
    JsonApiModule
  ],
  declarations: [
    AppComponent
  ],
  bootstrap: [AppComponent]
})
export class AppModule { }

Note: Because in our custom Datastore service we will make use of dependency injection into a class that inherits from a class of this module (see this doc for an example) the used @angular/http module in our base project need to be of the same version as the version used by this module. Otherwise you will get an error like this:

Argument of type 'Http' is not assignable to parameter of type 'Http'.
  Property '_backend' is protected but type 'Http' is not a class derived from 'Http'.

See this issue for details.

Usage

Configuration

Firstly, create your Datastore service:

  • Extend the JsonApiDatastore class
  • Decorate it with @JsonApiDatastoreConfig, set the baseUrl for your APIs and map your models
  • Pass the Http depencency to the parent constructor.
import { JsonApiDatastoreConfig, JsonApiDatastore } from 'angular2-jsonapi';

@Injectable()
@JsonApiDatastoreConfig({
  baseUrl: 'http://localhost:8000/v1/',
  models: {
    posts: Post,
    comments: Comment,
    users: User
  }
})
export class Datastore extends JsonApiDatastore {

    constructor(http: Http) {
        super(http);
    }

}

Then set up your models:

  • Extend the JsonApiModel class
  • Decorate it with @JsonApiModelConfig, passing the type
  • Decorate the class properties with @Attribute
  • Decorate the relationships attributes with @HasMany and @BelongsTo
import { JsonApiModelConfig, JsonApiModel, Attribute, HasMany, BelongsTo } from 'angular2-jsonapi';

@JsonApiModelConfig({
    type: 'posts'
})
export class Post extends JsonApiModel {

	@Attribute()
    title: string;

	@Attribute()
    content: string;

    @Attribute()
    created_at: Date;

    @HasMany()
    comments: Comment[];
}

@JsonApiModelConfig({
    type: 'comments'
})
export class Comment extends JsonApiModel {

	@Attribute()
    title: string;

    @Attribute()
    created_at: Date;

    @BelongsTo()
    post: Post;

	@BelongsTo()
    user: User;
}

@JsonApiModelConfig({
    type: 'users'
})
export class User extends JsonApiModel {

	@Attribute()
    name: string;
    // ...
}

Finding Records

Querying for Multiple Records

Now, you can use your Datastore in order to query your API with the query() method:

  • The first argument is the type of object you want to query.
  • The second argument is the list of params: write them in JSON format and they will be serialized.
// ...
constructor(private datastore: Datastore) { }

getPosts(){
    this.datastore.query(Post, {
        page: { size: 10, number: 1}
    }).subscribe(
        (posts: Post[]) => console.log(posts)
    );
}

Use peekAll() to retrieve all of the records for a given type that are already loaded into the store, without making a network request:

let posts = this.datastore.peekAll(Post);

Retrieving a Single Record

Use findRecord() to retrieve a record by its type and ID:

this.datastore.findRecord(Post, '1').subscribe(
    (post: Post) => console.log(post)
);

Use peekRecord() to retrieve a record by its type and ID, without making a network request. This will return the record only if it is already present in the store:

let post = this.datastore.peekRecord(Post, '1');

Creating, Updating and Deleting

Creating Records

You can create records by calling the createRecord() method on the datastore:

  • The first argument is the type of object you want to create.
  • The second is a JSON with the object attributes.
this.datastore.createRecord(Post, {
    title: 'My post',
    content: 'My content'
});

Updating Records

Making changes to records is as simple as setting the attribute you want to change:

this.datastore.findRecord(Post, '1').subscribe(
    (post: Post) => {
		post.title = 'New title';
	}
);

Persisting Records

Records are persisted on a per-instance basis. Call save() on any instance of JsonApiModel and it will make a network request.

The library takes care of tracking the state of each record for you, so that newly created records are treated differently from existing records when saving.

Newly created records will be POSTed:

let post = this.datastore.createRecord(Post, {
    title: 'My post',
    content: 'My content'
});

post.save().subscribe();  // => POST to '/posts'

Records that already exist on the backend are updated using the HTTP PATCH verb:

this.datastore.findRecord(Post, '1').subscribe(
    (post: Post) => {
		post.title = 'New title';
		post.save().subscribe();  // => PATCH to '/posts/1'
	}
);

The save() method will return an Observer that you can subscribe:

post.save().subscribe(
    (post: Post) => console.log(post)
);

Note: always remember to call the subscribe() method, even if you are not interested in doing something with the response. Since the http method return a cold Observable, the request won't go out until something subscribes to the observable.

You can tell if a record has outstanding changes that have not yet been saved by checking its hasDirtyAttributes property.

At this point, you can either persist your changes via save() or you can roll back your changes. Calling rollbackAttributes() for a saved record reverts all the dirty attributes to their original value.

this.datastore.findRecord(Post, '1').subscribe(
    (post: Post) => {
        console.log(post.title);                // => 'Old title'
        console.log(post.hasDirtyAttributes);   // => false
		post.title = 'New title';
        console.log(post.hasDirtyAttributes);   // => true
		post.rollbackAttributes();
        console.log(post.hasDirtyAttributes);   // => false
        console.log(post.title);                // => 'Old title'
	}
);

Deleting Records

For deleting a record, just call the datastore's method deleteRecord(), passing the type and the id of the record:

this.datastore.deleteRecord(Post, '1').subscribe(() => {
    // deleted!
});

Relationships

Querying records

In order to query an object including its relationships, you can pass in its options the attribute name you want to load with the relationships:

this.datastore.query(Post, {
    page: { size: 10, number: 1},
    include: 'comments'
}).subscribe(
    (posts: Post[]) => console.log(posts)
);

The same, if you want to include relationships when finding a record:

this.datastore.findRecord(Post, '1', {
    include: 'comments,comments.user'
}).subscribe(
    (post: Post) => console.log(post)
);

The library will try to resolve relationships on infinite levels connecting nested objects by reference. So that you can have a Post, with a list of Comments, that have a User that has Posts, that have Comments... etc.

Creating Records

If the object you want to create has a one-to-many relationship, you can do this:

let post = this.datastore.peekRecord(Post, '1');
let comment = this.datastore.createRecord(Comment, {
    title: 'My comment',
    post: post
});
comment.save().subscribe();

The library will do its best to discover which relationships map to one another. In the code above, for example, setting the comment relationship with the post will update the post.comments array, automatically adding the comment object!

If you want to include a relationship when creating a record to have it parsed in the response, you can pass the params object to the save() method:

comment.save({
	include: 'user'
}).subscribe(
    (comment: Comment) => console.log(comment)
);

Updating Records

You can also update an object that comes from a relationship:

this.datastore.findRecord(Post, '1', {
    include: 'comments'
}).subscribe(
    (post: Post) => {
        let comment: Comment = post.comments[0];
        comment.title = 'Cool';
        comment.save().subscribe((comment: Comment) => {
            console.log(comment);
        });
    }
);

Custom Headers

By default, the library adds these headers, according to the JSON API MIME Types:

Accept: application/vnd.api+json
Content-Type: application/vnd.api+json

You can also add your custom headers to be appended to each http call:

this.datastore.headers = new Headers({'Authorization': 'Bearer ' + accessToken});

Or you can pass the headers as last argument of any datastore call method:

this.datastore.query(Post, {
    include: 'comments'
}, new Headers({'Authorization': 'Bearer ' + accessToken}));

and in the save() method:

post.save({}, new Headers({'Authorization': 'Bearer ' + accessToken})).subscribe();

Error handling

Error handling is done in the subscribe method of the returned Observables. If your server returns valid JSON API Error Objects you can access them in your onError method:

import {ErrorResponse} from "angular2-jsonapi";

...

this.datastore.query(Post).subscribe(
    (posts: Post[]) => console.log(posts),
    (errorResponse) => {
        if (errorResponse instanceof ErrorResponse) {
              // do something with errorResponse
              console.log(errorResponse.errors);
        }
    }
);

It's also possible to handle errors for all requests by overriding handleError(error: any): ErrorObservable in the datastore.

Dates

The library will automatically transform date values into Date objects and it will serialize them when sending to the server. In order to do that, remember to set the type of the corresponding attribute as Date:

@JsonApiModelConfig({
    type: 'posts'
})
export class Post extends JsonApiModel {

	// ...

    @Attribute()
    created_at: Date;

}

Moreover, it should be noted that the following assumptions have been made:

  • The JsonApi spec suggests that ISO8601 format is used for dates, the code assumes the producer of the Api has followed this suggestion
  • The library also assumes that dates will be sent and received in UTC. This should be a safe assumption for Api providers to multinational clients, or cloud hosting where the timezone of the server cannot be guaranteed.

TODO

  • Deleting records
  • Conversion to and from Date property
  • Handling validation errors
  • Updating or removing a relationship
  • Explicit inverses
  • Loading an object's relationships
  • Unit testing
  • Setting a specific baseUrl for each model

Development

To generate all *.js, *.js.map and *.d.ts files:

$ npm run ngc

To lint all *.ts files:

$ npm run lint

Thanks

This library is inspired by the draft of this never implemented library.

License

MIT © Daniele Ghidoli

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A lightweight Angular 2 adapter for JSON API

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