nbbaier-listuntitled.web.val.run
  • pomdtr avatar
    api
    @pomdtr
    An interactive, runnable TypeScript val by pomdtr
    Script
  • nbbaier avatar
    fetchPaginatedData
    @nbbaier
    Forked from stevekrouse/fetchJSON
    Script
  • nbbaier avatar
    paginatedResponse
    @nbbaier
    Return a paginated response A helper function to take an array and return a paginated response. This is useful when defining one's own folders for pomdtr's vscode extension . Usage: const data = [...] export default async function(req: Request): Promise<Response> { return paginatedResponse(req, data); } For demo usage in the context of the vscode extension see this val .
    Script
  • nbbaier avatar
    vtApiClient
    @nbbaier
    An interactive, runnable TypeScript val by nbbaier
    Script
  • pomdtr avatar
    extractValInfo
    @pomdtr
    Extract vals infos (author, name, version) from a val url (either from esm.town or val.town ). Example usage: const {author, name} = extractValInfo(import.meta.url) Also returns a unique slug for the val: <author>/<name>
    Script
  • std avatar
    fetch
    @std
    Proxied fetch - Docs ↗ The Javascript Fetch API is directly available within a Val. However sometimes fetch calls are blocked by the receiving server for using particular IP addresses. Additionally, network blips or unreliable web services may lead to failures if not handled properly. The Val Town standard library contains an alternative version, std/fetch , that wraps the JavaScript Fetch API to provide additional functionality. The fetch function from std/fetch reroutes requests using a proxy vendor so that requests obtain different IP addresses. It also automatically retries failed requests several times. Note that using std/fetch will be significantly slower than directly calling the Javascript Fetch API due to extra network hops. Usage After importing std/fetch , the fetch method is used with the same signature as the Javascript Fetch API. import { fetch } from "https://esm.town/v/std/fetch"; let result = await fetch("https://api64.ipify.org?format=json"); let json = await result.json(); console.log(json.ip); If you run the above code multiple times, you'll see that it returns different IP addresses, because std/fetch uses proxies so that each request is made from a different IP address. 📝 Edit docs
    Script
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February 8, 2024