0.1.5 • Published 1 year ago

fit-encoder v0.1.5

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
1 year ago

fit-encoder

Provides a couple of classes for generating FIT files in JavaScript. There are also some examples to show how to write an encoder for a given FIT file.

  • fitConstants contains all the enum definitions used by various messages.
  • fitMessages defines each available field in the defined messages.
  • fitTypes has the classes used to define messages used for encoding your file.
  • fitEncoder is the base type for your encoder.

The basic format is to write a class that extends FitEncoder. You can then define the messages you will be using, then write data messages as needed. A message has the form of:

  let myMessage = new Message(FitConstants.mesg_num.MESSAGE_TYPE,
    FitMessages.MESSAGE_TYPE,
    "field1",
    ...
    "fieldN");

You can then write data messages as follows:

  myMessage.writeDataMessage(
    field1,
    ...
    fieldN);

You can also combine the above, if you only need that particular type of message once, like so:

  new Message(...).writeDataMessage(...);

Once your message has been written, you can call getFile() on your encoder object, which will write the header and the trailing CRC, and return a Uint8Array that you can then use for downloading, etc.

Automatically downloading the file can look something like:

  // either generate the contents in the constructor directly,
  // or define a method to call...
  var encoder = new MyEncoder(options...);
  
  // create an Object URL
  const url = URL.createObjectURL(new Block([encoder.getFile()],
      { type: 'application/octet' });
  
  // create a temporary link and trigger its 'click' event
  const link = document.createElement('a');
  link.href = url;
  link.download = 'some file.fit';
  link.style.display = 'none';
  document.body.appendChild(link);
  link.click();
  
  // clean up resources, otherwise you'll leak memory
  URL.revokeObjectURL(url);
  link.remove();

FitEncoder also has a helper function, FitEncoder.toFitTimestamp to convert a JavaScript Date object into a FIT timestamp.

Currently, the main limitation is that scale and offset are not applied automatically, so you'll need to refer to the FIT SDK to see if you need to apply one or both of these to a given field.

0.1.5

1 year ago

0.1.4

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0.1.3

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0.1.2

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0.1.1

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