0.3.3 • Published 10 months ago

@fugle/realtime-nest v0.3.3

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
10 months ago

@fugle/realtime-nest

NPM version

A Nest module wrapper for @fugle/realtime

Installation

To begin using it, we first install the required dependencies.

$ npm install --save @fugle/realtime-nest @fugle/realtime

Getting started

Once the installation is complete, to use the HttpClient or WebSocketClient, first import FugleRealtimeModule and pass the options with apiToken to the register() method.

import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { FugleRealtimeModule } from '@fugle/realtime-nest';

@Module({
  imports: [
    FugleRealtimeModule.register({
      apiToken: 'demo',
    }),
  ],
})
export class IntradayModule {}

Next, inject the HttpClient instance using the @InjectHttpClient() decorator.

constructor(@InjectHttpClient() private readonly client: HttpClient) {}

The @InjectWebSocketClient() decorator is used for the WebSocketClient instance injection.

constructor(@InjectWebSocketClient() private readonly client: WebSocketClient) {}

Async configuration

When you need to pass module options asynchronously instead of statically, use the registerAsync() method. As with most dynamic modules, Nest provides several techniques to deal with async configuration.

One technique is to use a factory function:

FugleRealtimeModule.registerAsync({
  useFactory: () => ({
    apiToken: 'demo',
  }),
});

Like other factory providers, our factory function can be async and can inject dependencies through inject.

FugleRealtimeModule.registerAsync({
  imports: [ConfigModule],
  useFactory: async (configService: ConfigService) => ({
    apiToken: configService.get('FUGLE_REALTIME_API_TOKEN'),
  }),
  inject: [ConfigService],
});

Alternatively, you can configure the FugleRealtimeModule using a class instead of a factory, as shown below.

FugleRealtimeModule.registerAsync({
  useClass: FugleRealtimeConfigService,
});

The construction above instantiates FugleRealtimeConfigService inside FugleRealtimeModule, using it to create an options object. Note that in this example, the FugleRealtimeConfigService has to implement FugleRealtimeModuleOptionsFactory interface as shown below. The FugleRealtimeModule will call the createFugleRealtimeOptions() method on the instantiated object of the supplied class.

@Injectable()
class FugleRealtimeConfigService implements FugleRealtimeModuleOptionsFactory {
  createFugleRealtimeOptions(): FugleRealtimeModuleOptions {
    return {
      apiToken: 'demo',
    };
  }
}

If you want to reuse an existing options provider instead of creating a private copy inside the FugleRealtimeModule, use the useExisting syntax.

FugleRealtimeModule.registerAsync({
  imports: [ConfigModule],
  useExisting: FugleRealtimeConfigService,
});

Reference

License

MIT

0.3.3

10 months ago

0.3.2

2 years ago

0.3.1

2 years ago

0.3.0

2 years ago