tio 0.8.0 tio: ^0.8.0 copied to clipboard
A simple wrapper for dio with response typing and full backward compatibility. Inspired by chopper.
A simple wrapper for dio with response typing and full backward compatibility.
Inspired by chopper.
This package currently in beta. Use it with caution.
Features #
- Safe typing of successful and unsuccessful responses.
- Expected behavior.
- Does not affect basic Dio functionality including other plugins or interceptors.
- Simple and familiar Dio like api.
- Core concept is receiving a response as either type to utilize the exhaustive pattern.
- No external dependencies.
Basic usage:
import 'package:tio/tio.dart'; // 'package:dio.dio.dart' imports implicitly.
class User {
User.fromJson(Map<String, dynamic> json) : id = json['id'] as int;
final int id;
}
class MyError {
const MyError.fromString(this.errorMessage);
const MyError.empty() : errorMessage = 'Unknown message';
MyError.fromJson(Map<String, dynamic> json) : errorMessage = json['message'] as String;
final String errorMessage;
}
const factoryConfig = TioFactoryConfig<MyError>(
[
TioJsonFactory<User>(User.fromJson),
],
// Factory for error transformation
errorGroup: TioFactoryGroup(
// when response body is empty (or empty string)
empty: TioEmptyFactory(MyError.empty),
string: TioStringFactory(MyError.fromString), // string
json: TioJsonFactory(MyError.fromJson), // or json
),
);
final dio = Dio();
final tio = Tio<MyError>(
dio: dio, // Tio uses dio under the hood
factoryConfig: factoryConfig,
);
Future<TioResponse<User, MyError>> getUser(int id) =>
tio.get<User>('/users/$id').one();
void main() async {
switch (await getUser(1)) {
case TioSuccess<User, MyError>(result: final user):
print('user id is ${user.id}');
case TioFailure<User, MyError>(error: final error):
print('error acquired ${error.errorMessage}');
}
}
Guide #
Common
Tio
mirrors the common methods of Dio
such as get
, post
, put
etc. but returns proxy object as a result that might be transformed by additional methods like one()
, many()
, string()
etc.
Future<TioResponse<User, MyError>> getUser(int id) =>
tio.get<User>('/users/$id').one();
Future<TioResponse<List<User>, MyError>> getUsers() =>
tio.get<User>('/users').many();
Future<TioResponse<User, MyError>> updateUser(int id, String name) =>
tio.post<User>('/users/$id', data: {'name': name}).one();
Future<TioResponse<String, MyError>> getString() =>
tio.get<String>('/text').string();
Using TioApi helper class [Optional]
class UserApi extends TioApi<MyError> {
UserApi({required super.tio}) : super(path: '/users');
Future<TioResponse<User, MyError>> getUser(int id) =>
get<User>('/$id').one();
Future<TioResponse<List<User>, MyError>> getUsers() =>
get<User>('/').many();
}
How Tio knows that response is unsuccessful?
With the Options.validateStatus
property.
Tio transforms any DioException
with type badResposce
into an ErrorT
then returns TioFailure<..., ErrorT>
instead of throwing an exception.
Tips & Tricks
Alias usage to slightly reduce code size.
typedef MyResponse<T> = TioResponse<T, MyError>;
Future<MyResponse<User>> getUser(int id) =>
tio.get<User>('/users/$id').one();
Check tests for additional usage info.
Initially this library was created for personal usage.