A new, decent and possibly working public transport API wrapper for the city of Turin, Italy.
This is the core package of the GTTTools application, an API wrapper and middleware meant for local or server side use, which provides a simplified interface for interacting with the GTT live public transportation API.
GTTTools-core fetches its data from the same endpoint used by the GTT live tracker and many other services.
Here's why you should use GTTTools-core instead of different solutions:
- GTTTools-core is entirely available in English, unlike the original data, which is partially written in Italian for seemingly no reason.
- Requests made easy. Just worry about your app's logic, GTTTools-core will handle HTTP requests, headers and parameters for you.
- Simplified polling. Enter your preferred polling interval to enjoy the fastest data available.
- Easily accessible data. GTTTools-core removes redundant data and improves typings on the response objects.
Download from npm using npm i gtttools
.
GTTTools-core provides two classes: Stop
and Route
.
The Stop
class represents a bus or tram stop. Each stop is assigned a number, which the Stop.poll(...)
method takes as a parameter.
import { Stop } from 'GTTTools'
const myStop = new Stop();
myStop.poll(40, 1000); //Poll stop 40 (Porta Nuova) every 1000 milliseconds
myStop.on('refresh', (passageData, stop) => {
console.log(`Data on stop ${stop}`)
/* Your code here */
console.log(passageData);
});
myStop.stop(); //Stop the polling
This returns an array of lines, stating the programmed and real time arrival date of the bus or tram. The lineID
property may be used as a parameter for the Route
class.
[
{
line: '9',
lineID: '9',
direction: 'BARRIERA LANZO, PIAZZA STAMPALIA',
realTime: [ 2022-10-21T20:07:00.000Z ],
programmed: [ 2022-10-21T20:09:00.000Z, 2022-10-21T20:54:00.000Z ]
},
{
line: '67',
lineID: '67',
direction: 'CITTADELLA, PIAZZA ARBARELLO',
realTime: [ 2022-10-21T20:12:00.000Z ],
programmed: [ 2022-10-21T20:16:00.000Z, 2022-10-21T20:46:00.000Z ]
}
]
Note: this endpoint takes several seconds to load because of a slow endpoint on the GTT API.
The Route
class represents a bus or tram route (line). Each route is assigned a code, which the Route.poll(...)
method takes as a parameter.
import { Route } from 'GTTTools'
const myRoute = new Route();
myRoute.poll('4', 1000); //Poll route 4 every 1000 milliseconds
myRoute.on('refresh', (vehicleData, route) => {
console.log(`Data on route ${route}`)
/* Your code here */
console.log(vehicleData);
});
myVehicle.stop(); //Stop the polling
Note: despite often being a number, the route code is a string because it can sometimes include letters inside of it. Examples of this are: 9N, 72B and M1S.
This returns an array of vehicles, stating the latest available coordinates of the bus or tram. The id
property may be used to identify the bus or tram model.
[
{
id: 6017,
vehicleType: 'Tram',
lat: 45.06237,
lon: 7.67727,
direction: 166,
updated: 2022-10-21T20:13:00.000Z
},
{
id: 6027,
vehicleType: 'Tram',
lat: 45.08133,
lon: 7.68663,
direction: 24,
updated: 2022-10-21T20:12:00.000Z
}
]
GTTTools-core is compatible with TypeScript. The module exports the the following TypeScript interfaces, useful to interact with the middleware:
Stop
class:
interface passage {
line: string,
lineID: string,
direction: string,
realTime: Date[],
programmed: Date[]
}
Route
class:
interface vehicle {
id: number,
vehicleType: string,
lat: number,
lon: number,
direction: number,
updated: Date,
};