fluri 1.2.5 fluri: ^1.2.5 copied to clipboard
Fluri is a fluent URI library built to make URI mutation easy.
fluri #
Examples/Usage #
Fluri is a fluent URI library for Dart built to make URI mutation easy.
The dart:core.Uri
class provides an immutable representation of URIs, which
makes it difficult to incrementally build them or update them at a later time.
If you wanted to build a long URI from the individual pieces, you would do
something like this:
Uri uri = new Uri(
scheme: 'https',
host: 'example.com',
path: 'path/to/resource'
);
If you later wanted to update the path and add a query parameter, you'd have to do this:
uri = uri.replace(
path: 'new/path',
query: 'foo=true'
);
Now let's say you want update the query without losing what you already have:
Map query = new Map.from(uri.queryParameters);
query['bar'] = '10';
uri = uri.replace(queryParameters: query);
As you can see, incremental or fluent-style URI mutations become a hassle with
the core Uri
class.
With fluri, the above interactions are easy:
import 'package:fluri/fluri.dart';
Fluri fluri = new Fluri()
..scheme = 'https'
..host = 'example.com'
..path = 'path/to/resource';
fluri
..path = 'new/path'
..query = 'foo=true';
fluri.updateQuery({'bar': '10'});
Additional methods like appendToPath
and setQueryParam
make it easy to
build on top of a base URL:
import 'package:fluri/fluri.dart';
Fluri base = new Fluri('https://example.com/base/');
Fluri fluri = new Fluri.from(base)
..appendToPath('path/to/resource')
..setQueryParam('count', '10');
Fluri also supports multi-value parameters. To access the query parameters as
Map<String, List<String>>
, use queryParametersAll
(just like the Uri
class):
var fluri = new Fluri('/resource?format=json&format=text');
print(fluri.queryParameters); // {'format': 'text'}
print(fluri.queryParametersAll); // {'format': ['json', 'text']}
To set a single query parameter to multiple values:
var fluri = new Fluri('/resource');
fluri.setQueryParam('format', ['json', 'text']);
print(fluri.queryParametersAll); // {'format': ['json', 'text']}
Using setQueryParam
will always replace existing values:
var fluri = new Fluri('/resource');
fluri.setQueryParam('format', ['json', 'text']);
fluri.setQueryParam('format', ['binary', 'text']);
print(fluri.queryParametersAll); // {'format': ['binary', 'text']}
You can use the queryParametersAll
setter to set the entire query with
multi-value param support:
var fluri = new Fluri('/resource');
fluri.queryParametersAll = {'format': ['json', 'text'], 'count': ['5']}
print(fluri.queryParametersAll); // {'format': ['json', 'text'], 'count': ['5']}
Again, if you need to preserve existing query parameters, you can use the
updateQuery
method to do so. Set mergeValues: true
and any values that you
provide will be merged with existing values:
var fluri = new Fluri('/resource?format=json');
fluri.updateQuery({'format': ['binary', 'text'], 'count': '5'}, mergeValues: true);
print(fluri.queryParametersAll); // {'format': ['binary', 'json', 'text'], 'count': ['5']}
Dart SDK #
As of version 1.2.0 of the fluri
package, the minimum required Dart SDK
version is 1.15.0.
Versioning and Stability #
This library follows semver to the best of our interpretation of it. We want this library to be a stable dependency that’s easy to keep current. A good explanation of the versioning scheme that we intend to follow can be seen here from React.js:
https://facebook.github.io/react/blog/2016/02/19/new-versioning-scheme.html
In short: our goal is for every major release to be backwards compatible with the previous major version, giving consumers a lifespan of two major versions to deal with deprecations.