ワンクリックで
nodejs-api-client-caching
Pattern for building Node.js API clients with TTL-based caching and no external dependencies
Codex または Claude でインストール この Prompt をコピーして Codex、Claude、または他のアシスタントに貼り付けると、Skill ページを確認してインストールできます。
メニュー
Pattern for building Node.js API clients with TTL-based caching and no external dependencies
Codex または Claude でインストール この Prompt をコピーして Codex、Claude、または他のアシスタントに貼り付けると、Skill ページを確認してインストールできます。
SOC 職業分類に基づく
Pattern for VS Code tree views that consume optional services with graceful degradation
Patterns for building dashboard webviews with tabs and visualizations
{what this skill teaches agents}
Lightweight YAML frontmatter extraction from markdown files without external dependencies
Pattern for coordinating VS Code status bar updates with tree view and data provider refresh cycles
CI pipeline patterns for VS Code extensions using GitHub Actions
| name | nodejs-api-client-caching |
| description | Pattern for building Node.js API clients with TTL-based caching and no external dependencies |
| domain | backend-services |
| confidence | low |
| source | earned |
When building API clients in Node.js (especially VS Code extensions or CLI tools that must stay zero/low-dependency), use the built-in https module with a simple TTL cache. This avoids polyfill issues with fetch in CommonJS environments and keeps the dependency footprint minimal.
Store fetched data alongside a fetchedAt timestamp. Check expiry on access. Expose forceRefresh parameter and invalidateCache() method for external triggers (e.g., file watchers).
interface Cache<T> {
data: T;
fetchedAt: number;
}
class ApiService {
private cache: Cache<MyData[]> | null = null;
private cacheTtlMs: number;
private isCacheExpired(): boolean {
if (!this.cache) return true;
return Date.now() - this.cache.fetchedAt > this.cacheTtlMs;
}
async getData(forceRefresh = false): Promise<MyData[]> {
if (!forceRefresh && this.cache && !this.isCacheExpired()) {
return this.cache.data;
}
const data = await this.fetchFromApi();
this.cache = { data, fetchedAt: Date.now() };
return data;
}
invalidateCache(): void {
this.cache = null;
}
}
Wrap https.request in a typed Promise. Set User-Agent (required by GitHub API), handle status codes, and parse JSON response.
private apiGet<T>(path: string): Promise<T> {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
const url = new URL(path, this.baseUrl);
const req = https.request({
hostname: url.hostname,
path: url.pathname + url.search,
method: 'GET',
headers: { 'User-Agent': 'MyApp', 'Accept': 'application/json' },
}, (res) => {
const chunks: Buffer[] = [];
res.on('data', (chunk: Buffer) => chunks.push(chunk));
res.on('end', () => {
const body = Buffer.concat(chunks).toString('utf-8');
if (res.statusCode && res.statusCode >= 200 && res.statusCode < 300) {
resolve(JSON.parse(body) as T);
} else {
reject(new Error(`API returned ${res.statusCode}`));
}
});
});
req.on('error', reject);
req.end();
});
}
When paginating API results, catch errors per-page. If a later page fails, return the pages already fetched rather than losing everything.
node-fetch or axios in zero-dep projects — Use https module instead.invalidateCache() and TTL expiry.