Welcome to the official JS client library for the Polygon REST and WebSocket API. To get started, please see the Getting Started section in our documentation, view the examples directory for code snippets, or the blog post with video tutorials to learn more. To generate the package documentation please run npm run generate-doc
.
For upgrade instructions please see the Release Notes.
To get started, you'll need to install the client library:
npm install --save `@polygon.io/client-js`
Next, create a new client with your API key.
import { restClient } from '@polygon.io/client-js';
const rest = restClient(process.env.POLY_API_KEY);
After creating the client, making calls to the Polygon API is easy. For example, here's how to get aggregates (bars):
rest.stocks.aggregates("AAPL", 1, "day", "2023-01-01", "2023-04-14").then((data) => {
console.log(data);
}).catch(e => {
console.error('An error happened:', e);
});
Or, maybe you want to get the last trades or quotes for a ticker:
// last trade
rest.stocks.lastTrade("AAPL").then((data) => {
console.log(data);
}).catch(e => {
console.error('An error happened:', e);
});
// last quote (NBBO)
rest.stocks.lastQuote("AAPL").then((data) => {
console.log(data);
}).catch(e => {
console.error('An error happened:', e);
});
Finally, maybe you want a market-wide snapshot of all tickers:
rest.stocks.snapshotAllTickers().then((data) => {
console.log(data);
}).catch(e => {
console.error('An error happened:', e);
});
See full examples for more details on how to use this client effectively.
To run these examples from the command line, first check out this project and run npm i
in the root directory to install dependencies, then run POLY_API_KEY=yourAPIKey node examples/rest/crypto-aggregates_bars.js
, replacing yourAPIKey with your Polygon API Key.
The client can handle pagination for you through the globalFetchOptions
by turning on the pagination: true
option. The feature will automatically fetch all next_url
pages of data when the API response indicates more data is available.
import('@polygon.io/client-js').then(({ restClient }) => {
const globalFetchOptions = {
pagination: true,
};
const rest = restClient("XXXX", "https://api.polygon.io", globalFetchOptions);
rest.stocks.aggregates("TSLA", 1, "minute", "2022-01-01", "2023-08-31", { limit: 50000 }).then((data) => {
const resultCount = data.length;
console.log("Result count:", resultCount);
}).catch(e => {
console.error('An error happened:', e);
});
});
If there is a next_url
field in the API response, the client will recursively fetch the next page for you, and then pass along the accumulated data.
Sometimes you may find it useful to see the actual request and response details while working with the API. The client allows for this through the globalFetchOptions
by turning on the trace: true
option.
You can activate the debug mode as follows:
import('@polygon.io/client-js').then(({ restClient }) => {
const globalFetchOptions = {
trace: true,
};
const rest = restClient("XXXX", "https://api.polygon.io", globalFetchOptions);
rest.stocks.aggregates("TSLA", 1, "minute", "2023-08-01", "2023-08-01", { limit: 50000 }).then((data) => {
const resultCount = data.length;
console.log("Result count:", resultCount);
}).catch(e => {
console.error('An error happened:', e);
});
});
When debug mode is enabled, the client will print out useful debugging information for each API request. This includes: the request URL, the headers sent in the request, and the headers received in the response.
For instance, if you made a request for TSLA
data for the date 2023-08-01
, you would see debug output similar to the following:
Request URL: https://api.polygon.io/v2/aggs/ticker/TSLA/range/1/minute/2023-08-01/2023-08-01?limit=50000
Request Headers: { Authorization: 'Bearer REDACTED' }
Response Headers: Headers {
[Symbol(map)]: [Object: null prototype] {
server: [ 'nginx/1.19.2' ],
date: [ 'Thu, 06 Jul 2023 18:34:27 GMT' ],
'content-type': [ 'application/json' ],
'transfer-encoding': [ 'chunked' ],
connection: [ 'close' ],
'content-encoding': [ 'gzip' ],
vary: [ 'Accept-Encoding' ],
'x-request-id': [ '06dc97920681d8335c0451894aa1f79f' ],
'strict-transport-security': [ 'max-age=15724800; includeSubDomains' ]
}
}
This can be an invaluable tool for debugging issues or understanding how the client interacts with the API.
Users of the Launchpad product will need to pass in certain headers in order to make API requests. Example can be found here.
Import the Websocket client and models packages to get started. You can get preauthenticated websocket clients for the 3 topics.
import { websocketClient } from "@polygon.io/client-js";
const stocksWS = websocketClient(process.env.POLY_API_KEY).stocks();
stocksWS.onmessage = ({data}) => {
const [message] = JSON.parse(data);
stocksWS.send('{"action":"subscribe", "params":"AM.MSFT,A.MSFT"}');
switch (message.ev) {
case "AM":
// your trade message handler
break;
case "A":
// your trade message handler
break;
}
};
stocksWS.send({ action: "subscribe", params: "T.MSFT" });
See full examples for more details on how to use this client effectively.
If you found a bug or have an idea for a new feature, please first discuss it with us by submitting a new issue. We will respond to issues within at most 3 weeks. We're also open to volunteers if you want to submit a PR for any open issues but please discuss it with us beforehand. PRs that aren't linked to an existing issue or discussed with us ahead of time will generally be declined. If you have more general feedback or want to discuss using this client with other users, feel free to reach out on our Slack channel.