369 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
369 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
# form-data-encoder
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Encode `FormData` content into the `multipart/form-data` format
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[](https://codecov.io/github/octet-stream/form-data-encoder?branch=master)
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[](https://github.com/octet-stream/form-data-encoder/actions/workflows/ci.yml)
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[](https://github.com/octet-stream/form-data-encoder/actions/workflows/eslint.yml)
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## Requirements
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- Node.js v14.17 or higher;
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- Runtime should support `TextEncoder`, `TextDecoder`, `WeakMap`, `WeakSet` and async generator functions;
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- For TypeScript users: tsc v4.3 or higher.
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## Installation
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You can install this package using npm:
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```sh
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npm install form-data-encoder
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```
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Or yarn:
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```sh
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yarn add form-data-encoder
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```
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Or pnpm:
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```sh
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pnpm add form-data-encoder
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```
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## Usage
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1. To start the encoding process, you need to create a new Encoder instance with the FormData you want to encode:
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```js
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import {Readable} from "stream"
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import {FormData, File} from "formdata-node"
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import {FormDataEncoder} from "form-data-encoder"
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import fetch from "node-fetch"
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const form = new FormData()
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form.set("greeting", "Hello, World!")
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form.set("file", new File(["On Soviet Moon landscape see binoculars through YOU"], "file.txt"))
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const encoder = new FormDataEncoder(form)
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const options = {
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method: "post",
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// Set request headers provided by the Encoder.
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// The `headers` property has `Content-Type` and `Content-Length` headers.
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headers: encoder.headers,
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// Create a Readable stream from the Encoder.
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// You can omit usage of `Readable.from` for HTTP clients whose support async iterables in request body.
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// The Encoder will yield FormData content portions encoded into the multipart/form-data format as node-fetch consumes the stream.
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body: Readable.from(encoder.encode()) // or just Readable.from(encoder)
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}
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const response = await fetch("https://httpbin.org/post", options)
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console.log(await response.json())
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```
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2. Encoder support different spec-compatible FormData implementations. Let's try it with [`formdata-polyfill`](https://github.com/jimmywarting/FormData):
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```js
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import {Readable} from "stream"
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import {FormDataEncoder} from "form-data-encoder"
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import {FormData} from "formdata-polyfill/esm-min.js"
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import {File} from "fetch-blob" // v3
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const form = new FormData()
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form.set("field", "Some value")
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form.set("file", new File(["File content goes here"], "file.txt"))
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const encoder = new FormDataEncoder(form)
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const options = {
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method: "post",
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headers: encoder.headers,
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body: Readable.from(encoder)
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}
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await fetch("https://httpbin.org/post", options)
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```
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3. Because the Encoder is iterable (it has both Symbol.asyncIterator and Symbol.iterator methods), you can use it with different targets. Let's say you want to convert FormData content into `Blob`, for that you can write a function like this:
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```js
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import {Readable} from "stream"
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import {FormDataEncoder} from "form-data-encoder"
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import {FormData, File, Blob, fileFromPath} from "formdata-node"
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import fetch from "node-fetch"
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const form = new FormData()
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form.set("field", "Just a random string")
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form.set("file", new File(["Using files is class amazing"], "file.txt"))
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form.set("fileFromPath", await fileFromPath("path/to/a/file.txt"))
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// Note 1: When using with native Blob or fetch-blob@2 you might also need to generate boundary string for your FormDataEncoder instance
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// because Blob will lowercase value of the `type` option and default boundary generator produces a string with both lower and upper cased alphabetical characters. Math.random() should be enough to fix this:
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// const encoder = new FormDataEncoder(form, String(Math.random()))
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const encoder = new FormDataEncoder(form)
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const options = {
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method: "post",
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// Note 2: To use this approach with fetch-blob@2 you probably gonna need to convert the encoder parts output to an array first:
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// new Blob([...encoder], {type: encoder.contentType})
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body: new Blob(encoder, {type: encoder.contentType})
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}
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const response = await fetch("https://httpbin.org/post", options)
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console.log(await response.json())
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```
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4. Here's FormData to Blob conversion with async-iterator approach:
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```js
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import {FormData} from "formdata-polyfill/esm-min.js"
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import {blobFrom} from "fetch-blob/from.js"
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import {FormDataEncoder} from "form-data-encoder"
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import Blob from "fetch-blob"
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import fetch from "node-fetch"
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// This approach may require much more RAM compared to the previous one, but it works too.
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async function toBlob(form) {
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const encoder = new Encoder(form)
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const chunks = []
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for await (const chunk of encoder) {
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chunks.push(chunk)
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}
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return new Blob(chunks, {type: encoder.contentType})
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}
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const form = new FormData()
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form.set("name", "John Doe")
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form.set("avatar", await blobFrom("path/to/an/avatar.png"), "avatar.png")
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const options = {
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method: "post",
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body: await toBlob(form)
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}
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await fetch("https://httpbin.org/post", options)
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```
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5. Another way to convert FormData parts to blob using `form-data-encoder` is making a Blob-ish class:
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```js
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import {Readable} from "stream"
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import {FormDataEncoder} from "form-data-encoder"
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import {FormData} from "formdata-polyfill/esm-min.js"
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import {blobFrom} from "fetch-blob/from.js"
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import Blob from "fetch-blob"
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import fetch from "node-fetch"
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class BlobDataItem {
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constructor(encoder) {
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this.#encoder = encoder
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this.#size = encoder.headers["Content-Length"]
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this.#type = encoder.headers["Content-Type"]
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}
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get type() {
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return this.#type
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}
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get size() {
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return this.#size
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}
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stream() {
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return Readable.from(this.#encoder)
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}
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get [Symbol.toStringTag]() {
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return "Blob"
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}
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}
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const form = new FormData()
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form.set("name", "John Doe")
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form.set("avatar", await blobFrom("path/to/an/avatar.png"), "avatar.png")
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const encoder = new FormDataEncoder(form)
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// Note that node-fetch@2 performs more strictness tests for Blob objects, so you may need to do extra steps before you set up request body (like, maybe you'll need to instaniate a Blob with BlobDataItem as one of its blobPart)
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const blob = new BlobDataItem(enocoder) // or new Blob([new BlobDataItem(enocoder)], {type: encoder.contentType})
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const options = {
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method: "post",
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body: blob
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}
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await fetch("https://httpbin.org/post", options)
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```
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6. In this example we will pull FormData content into the ReadableStream:
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```js
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// This module is only necessary when you targeting Node.js or need web streams that implement Symbol.asyncIterator
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import {ReadableStream} from "web-streams-polyfill/ponyfill/es2018"
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import {FormDataEncoder} from "form-data-encoder"
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import {FormData} from "formdata-node"
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import fetch from "node-fetch"
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function toReadableStream(encoder) {
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const iterator = encoder.encode()
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return new ReadableStream({
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async pull(controller) {
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const {value, done} = await iterator.next()
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if (done) {
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return controller.close()
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}
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controller.enqueue(value)
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}
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})
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}
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const form = new FormData()
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form.set("field", "My hovercraft is full of eels")
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const encoder = new FormDataEncoder(form)
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const options = {
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method: "post",
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headers: encoder.headers,
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body: toReadableStream(encoder)
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}
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// Note that this example requires `fetch` to support Symbol.asyncIterator, which node-fetch lacks of (but will support eventually)
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await fetch("https://httpbin.org/post", options)
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```
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7. Speaking of async iterables - if HTTP client supports them, you can use encoder like this:
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```js
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import {FormDataEncoder} from "form-data-encoder"
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import {FormData} from "formdata-node"
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import fetch from "node-fetch"
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const form = new FormData()
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form.set("field", "My hovercraft is full of eels")
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const encoder = new FormDataEncoder(form)
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const options = {
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method: "post",
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headers: encoder.headers,
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body: encoder
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}
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await fetch("https://httpbin.org/post", options)
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```
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8. ...And for those client whose supporting form-data-encoder out of the box, the usage will be much, much more simpler:
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```js
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import {FormData} from "formdata-node" // Or any other spec-compatible implementation
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import fetch from "node-fetch"
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const form = new FormData()
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form.set("field", "My hovercraft is full of eels")
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const options = {
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method: "post",
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body: form
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}
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// Note that node-fetch does NOT support form-data-encoder
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await fetch("https://httpbin.org/post", options)
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```
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## API
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### `class FormDataEncoder`
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##### `constructor(form[, boundary, options]) -> {FormDataEncoder}`
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- **{FormDataLike}** form - FormData object to encode. This object must be a spec-compatible FormData implementation.
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- **{string}** [boundary] - An optional boundary string that will be used by the encoder. If there's no boundary string is present, FormDataEncoder will generate it automatically.
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- **{object}** [options] - FormDataEncoder options.
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- **{boolean}** [options.enableAdditionalHeaders = false] - When enabled, the encoder will emit additional per part headers, such as `Content-Length`. Please note that the web clients do not include these, so when enabled this option might cause an error if `multipart/form-data` does not consider additional headers.
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Creates a `multipart/form-data` encoder.
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#### Instance properties
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##### `boundary -> {string}`
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Returns boundary string.
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##### `contentType -> {string}`
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Returns Content-Type header.
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##### `contentLength -> {string}`
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Return Content-Length header.
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##### `headers -> {object}`
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Returns headers object with Content-Type and Content-Length header.
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#### Instance methods
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##### `values() -> {Generator<Uint8Array | FileLike, void, undefined>}`
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Creates an iterator allowing to go through form-data parts (with metadata).
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This method **will not** read the files.
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##### `encode() -> {AsyncGenerator<Uint8Array, void, undefined>}`
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Creates an async iterator allowing to perform the encoding by portions.
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This method **will** also read files.
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##### `[Symbol.iterator]() -> {Generator<Uint8Array | FileLike, void, undefined>}`
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An alias for `Encoder#values()` method.
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##### `[Symbol.asyncIterator]() -> {AsyncGenerator<Uint8Array, void, undefined>}`
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An alias for `Encoder#encode()` method.
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### `isFile(value) -> {boolean}`
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Check if a value is File-ish object.
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- **{unknown}** value - a value to test
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### `isFormData(value) -> {boolean}`
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Check if a value is FormData-ish object.
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- **{unknown}** value - a value to test
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