Body of Http.DELETE request in Angular2

I'm trying to talk to a somewhat RESTful API from an Angular 2 frontend.

To remove some item from a collection, I need to send some other data in addition to the removée unique id(that can be appended to the url), namely an authentication token, some collection info and some ancilliary data.

The most straightforward way I've found to do so is putting the authentication token in the request Headers, and other data in the body.

However, the Http module of Angular 2 doesn't quite approve of a DELETE request with a body, and trying to make this request

let headers= new Headers();
headers.append('access-token', token);

let body= JSON.stringify({
    target: targetId,
    subset: "fruits",
    reason: "rotten"
});

let options= new RequestOptions({headers:headers});
this.http.delete('http://testAPI:3000/stuff', body,options).subscribe((ok)=>{console.log(ok)}); <------line 67

gives this error

app/services/test.service.ts(67,4): error TS2346: Supplied parameters do not match any signature of call target.

Now, am I doing something wrong syntax-wise? I'm pretty sure a DELETE body is supported per RFC

Are there better ways to send that data?

Or should I just dump it in headers and call it a day?

Any insight on this conundrum would be appreciated


The http.delete(url, options) does accept a body. You just need to put it within the options object.

http.delete('/api/something', new RequestOptions({
   headers: headers,
   body: anyObject
}))

Reference options interface: https://angular.io/api/http/RequestOptions

UPDATE:

The above snippet only works for Angular 2.x, 4.x and 5.x.

For versions 6.x onwards, Angular offers 15 different overloads. Check all overloads here: https://angular.io/api/common/http/HttpClient#delete

Usage sample:

const options = {
  headers: new HttpHeaders({
    'Content-Type': 'application/json',
  }),
  body: {
    id: 1,
    name: 'test',
  },
};

this.httpClient
  .delete('http://localhost:8080/something', options)
  .subscribe((s) => {
    console.log(s);
  });

If you use Angular 6 we can put body in http.request method.

Reference from github

You can try this, for me it works.

import { HttpClient } from '@angular/common/http';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  templateUrl: './app.component.html',
  styleUrls: ['./app.component.scss'],
})
export class AppComponent {

  constructor(
    private http: HttpClient
  ) {
    http.request('delete', url, {body: body}).subscribe();
  }
}

In Angular 5, I had to use the request method instead of delete to send a body. The documentation for the delete method does not include body, but it is included in the request method.

import { HttpClient, HttpHeaders } from '@angular/common/http';

this.http.request('DELETE', url, {
  headers: new HttpHeaders({
    'Content-Type': 'application/json',
  }),
  body: { foo: bar }
});

You are actually able to fool Angular2 HTTP into sending a body with a DELETE by using the request method. This is how:

let body = {
    target: targetId,
    subset: "fruits",
    reason: "rotten"
};

let options = new RequestOptionsArgs({ 
    body: body,
    method: RequestMethod.Delete
  });

this.http.request('http://testAPI:3000/stuff', options)
    .subscribe((ok)=>{console.log(ok)});

Note, you will have to set the request method in the RequestOptionsArgs and not in http.request's alternative first parameter Request. That for some reason yields the same result as using http.delete

I hope this helps and that I am not to late. I think the angular guys are wrong here to not allow a body to be passed with delete, even though it is discouraged.


Below is a relevant code example for Angular 4/5 with the new HttpClient.

import { HttpClient } from '@angular/common/http';
import { HttpHeaders } from '@angular/common/http';

public removeItem(item) {
    let options = {
      headers: new HttpHeaders({
        'Content-Type': 'application/json',
      }),
      body: item,
    };

    return this._http
      .delete('/api/menu-items', options)
      .map((response: Response) => response)
      .toPromise()
      .catch(this.handleError);
  }