It's like Browser
, but smaller. It provides minimal browser support for libraries and frameworks which don't need the full spectrum of support from opal-browser
.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'bowser'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install bowser
Inside your front-end app:
require 'bowser'
Bowser.document # Handle to the current document
Bowser.window # Handle to the current window
To load HTTP support, require it by running:
require 'bowser/http'
To make HTTP requests to your API, you can use Bowser::HTTP.fetch
:
Bowser::HTTP.fetch('/api/things')
It returns a Bowser::Promise
, on which you can call then
or catch
in order to execute a block of code based on success or failure, respectively.
Bowser::HTTP.fetch(url)
.then(&:json) # JSONify the response
.then { |response| do_something_with(response.json) }
.catch { |exception| warn exception.message }
To make POST
requests, you can pass the method
keyword argument. The body of the post is represented in the data
keyword argument. This is in contrast to the ES6 fetch
function, which uses body
, but requires a string. The data
argument lets you pass in a string or a hash, which will be converted to JSON:
Bowser::HTTP.fetch(url, method: :post, data: { name: 'Bowser' })
This project is governed by a Code of Conduct
- Fork it
- Branch it
- Hack it
- Save it
- Commit it
- Push it
- Pull-request it