How to find out which get and post request called in same function handler?
According to this example:
ROUTE('GET /api/users/', action);
ROUTE('POST /api/users/', action);
in the body of function action
how we can find out get or post request has been called so that write appropriate code?
node.js total.js
add a comment |
According to this example:
ROUTE('GET /api/users/', action);
ROUTE('POST /api/users/', action);
in the body of function action
how we can find out get or post request has been called so that write appropriate code?
node.js total.js
add a comment |
According to this example:
ROUTE('GET /api/users/', action);
ROUTE('POST /api/users/', action);
in the body of function action
how we can find out get or post request has been called so that write appropriate code?
node.js total.js
According to this example:
ROUTE('GET /api/users/', action);
ROUTE('POST /api/users/', action);
in the body of function action
how we can find out get or post request has been called so that write appropriate code?
node.js total.js
node.js total.js
asked Jan 1 at 6:15
Pourya8366Pourya8366
61411224
61411224
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
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You might pass a function that calls action
with another argument that indicates which method was used:
ROUTE('GET /api/users/', function(...args) { action.call(this, 'GET', ...args) });
ROUTE('POST /api/users/', function(...args) { action.call(this, 'POST', ...args) });
With this, the first argument passed to action
will be the method used, and the rest of the arguments will be the ones that the ROUTE
callback would receive normally.
It doesn't work! when i want to accessreq
body fromthis
object according to total.js docs, this object get empty and in another word i think write function in this way change the behavior.
– Pourya8366
Jan 1 at 6:35
If the calling context is important, then just change from an arrow function to a standard function, see edit
– CertainPerformance
Jan 1 at 7:08
1
oh, and use.call
too
– CertainPerformance
Jan 1 at 7:15
it's correct, thanks! and we don't need the...args
, passingthis
is enough.
– Pourya8366
Jan 1 at 7:28
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You might pass a function that calls action
with another argument that indicates which method was used:
ROUTE('GET /api/users/', function(...args) { action.call(this, 'GET', ...args) });
ROUTE('POST /api/users/', function(...args) { action.call(this, 'POST', ...args) });
With this, the first argument passed to action
will be the method used, and the rest of the arguments will be the ones that the ROUTE
callback would receive normally.
It doesn't work! when i want to accessreq
body fromthis
object according to total.js docs, this object get empty and in another word i think write function in this way change the behavior.
– Pourya8366
Jan 1 at 6:35
If the calling context is important, then just change from an arrow function to a standard function, see edit
– CertainPerformance
Jan 1 at 7:08
1
oh, and use.call
too
– CertainPerformance
Jan 1 at 7:15
it's correct, thanks! and we don't need the...args
, passingthis
is enough.
– Pourya8366
Jan 1 at 7:28
add a comment |
You might pass a function that calls action
with another argument that indicates which method was used:
ROUTE('GET /api/users/', function(...args) { action.call(this, 'GET', ...args) });
ROUTE('POST /api/users/', function(...args) { action.call(this, 'POST', ...args) });
With this, the first argument passed to action
will be the method used, and the rest of the arguments will be the ones that the ROUTE
callback would receive normally.
It doesn't work! when i want to accessreq
body fromthis
object according to total.js docs, this object get empty and in another word i think write function in this way change the behavior.
– Pourya8366
Jan 1 at 6:35
If the calling context is important, then just change from an arrow function to a standard function, see edit
– CertainPerformance
Jan 1 at 7:08
1
oh, and use.call
too
– CertainPerformance
Jan 1 at 7:15
it's correct, thanks! and we don't need the...args
, passingthis
is enough.
– Pourya8366
Jan 1 at 7:28
add a comment |
You might pass a function that calls action
with another argument that indicates which method was used:
ROUTE('GET /api/users/', function(...args) { action.call(this, 'GET', ...args) });
ROUTE('POST /api/users/', function(...args) { action.call(this, 'POST', ...args) });
With this, the first argument passed to action
will be the method used, and the rest of the arguments will be the ones that the ROUTE
callback would receive normally.
You might pass a function that calls action
with another argument that indicates which method was used:
ROUTE('GET /api/users/', function(...args) { action.call(this, 'GET', ...args) });
ROUTE('POST /api/users/', function(...args) { action.call(this, 'POST', ...args) });
With this, the first argument passed to action
will be the method used, and the rest of the arguments will be the ones that the ROUTE
callback would receive normally.
edited Jan 1 at 7:15
answered Jan 1 at 6:18
CertainPerformanceCertainPerformance
91k165179
91k165179
It doesn't work! when i want to accessreq
body fromthis
object according to total.js docs, this object get empty and in another word i think write function in this way change the behavior.
– Pourya8366
Jan 1 at 6:35
If the calling context is important, then just change from an arrow function to a standard function, see edit
– CertainPerformance
Jan 1 at 7:08
1
oh, and use.call
too
– CertainPerformance
Jan 1 at 7:15
it's correct, thanks! and we don't need the...args
, passingthis
is enough.
– Pourya8366
Jan 1 at 7:28
add a comment |
It doesn't work! when i want to accessreq
body fromthis
object according to total.js docs, this object get empty and in another word i think write function in this way change the behavior.
– Pourya8366
Jan 1 at 6:35
If the calling context is important, then just change from an arrow function to a standard function, see edit
– CertainPerformance
Jan 1 at 7:08
1
oh, and use.call
too
– CertainPerformance
Jan 1 at 7:15
it's correct, thanks! and we don't need the...args
, passingthis
is enough.
– Pourya8366
Jan 1 at 7:28
It doesn't work! when i want to access
req
body from this
object according to total.js docs, this object get empty and in another word i think write function in this way change the behavior.– Pourya8366
Jan 1 at 6:35
It doesn't work! when i want to access
req
body from this
object according to total.js docs, this object get empty and in another word i think write function in this way change the behavior.– Pourya8366
Jan 1 at 6:35
If the calling context is important, then just change from an arrow function to a standard function, see edit
– CertainPerformance
Jan 1 at 7:08
If the calling context is important, then just change from an arrow function to a standard function, see edit
– CertainPerformance
Jan 1 at 7:08
1
1
oh, and use
.call
too– CertainPerformance
Jan 1 at 7:15
oh, and use
.call
too– CertainPerformance
Jan 1 at 7:15
it's correct, thanks! and we don't need the
...args
, passing this
is enough.– Pourya8366
Jan 1 at 7:28
it's correct, thanks! and we don't need the
...args
, passing this
is enough.– Pourya8366
Jan 1 at 7:28
add a comment |
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