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JavaScript API supported by HTTP Client

console.log

The HTTP Client supports the console.log() method to print the text value (or multiple values separated by commas) to the output of the response handler or pre-request handler scripts. You can also use client.log for the same purpose. Example:

GET example.org > {% console.log(response.status) %}

You can also pass a JavaScript object (for example, console.log(response.body)), and it will be displayed in the output in JSON format with proper syntax highlighting.

DOM methods and properties

The HTTP Client supports some of the DOM tree methods and properties that allow you to parse and manipulate XML and HTML documents received as part of the response body (or created using DOMParser). Supported methods include:

getElementsByTagName()

Returns a collection of elements with the given tag name. For example:

GET https://examples.http-client.intellij.net/xml > {% const slide = response.body.getElementsByTagName("slide")[0] console.log(slide) %}
getElementsByName()

Returns a collection of nodes with a given name attribute. For example:

getElementById()

Retrieves an Element object by its id.

getElementsByClassName()

Returns an array-like object of all child elements with the given class name.

DOMParser

Parse XML or HTML source code from a string into a DOM Document using the parseFromString() method. For example:

GET example.org > {% const xmlStr = '<q id="a"><span class="test" id="b">hey!</span><span id="bar">world</span><foo class="test" id="x-foo"/><bar name="x-foo"/></q>'; const doc = new DOMParser().parseFromString(xmlStr, "application/xml"); console.log(doc.getElementById("a")) console.log(doc.getElementById("b")) console.log(doc.getElementsByClassName("test")) console.log(doc.getElementsByTagName("span")) console.log(doc.getElementsByName("x-foo")) %}
createElement(tagName)

Creates the HTML element specified by tagName.

GET example.org > {% const xmlStr = '<q id="a"><span class="test" id="b">hey!</span><span id="bar">world</span><foo class="test" id="x-foo"/><bar name="x-foo"/></q>'; const doc = new DOMParser().parseFromString(xmlStr, "application/xml"); const bodyElement = doc.createElement("body"); %}

Start typing a method name to get completion for supported methods. Hover over it to get quick documentation. To view all supported DOM methods and properties, expand the sections below:

URLSearchParams

URLSearchParams is a JavaScript object that makes it easy to work with the query string part of a URL. URLSearchParams accepts parameters in the following formats:

  • Query string: URLSearchParams("key=value&key2=value2");

  • Key-value pairs representing URL parameters: URLSearchParams({ key1: "value1", key2: "value2" })

  • Array of key-value pairs: URLSearchParams([["key1", "value1"], ["key2", "value2"]])

The HTTP Client supports all known URLSearchParams methods. Example:

< {% client.global.set('query', 'foo=1&bar=2') const params = new URLSearchParams(client.global.get('query')); const params2 = new URLSearchParams([["planet", "tatooine"], ["year", "2"]]); const params3 = new URLSearchParams({key1: "value1", key2: "value2"}); console.log(params.has("bar")); // outputs true console.log(params.has("param")); // outputs false params.append("foo", 3); console.log(params.getAll("foo")); // outputs ["1","3"] for (let value of params.values()) { console.log(value); // outputs 1 2 3 } for (let key of params2.keys()) { console.log(key); // outputs planet year } client.global.set("query",params.toString()) %} GET example.org/{{query}}

Base64 encoding: btoa and atob

The HTTP Client supports the btoa() and atob() methods.

  • Use Window.btoa(stringToEncode) to create a Base64-encoded ASCII string from a stringToEncode string.

  • Use Window.atob(encodedData) to decode a string of data which has been encoded using Base64 encoding.

For example:

GET https://examples.http-client.intellij.net/ip > {% const encodedData = Window.btoa("Hello, world"); // encode a string const decodedData = Window.atob(encodedData); // decode the string console.log(decodedData); // prints "Hello, world" %}
Last modified: 05 November 2024