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Version: 10.x

Usage with Express

Example app​

DescriptionURLLinks
Express server & procedure calls with Node.js.n/a

How to add tRPC to existing Express project​

1. Install deps​

bash
yarn add @trpc/server zod
bash
yarn add @trpc/server zod

Zod isn't a required dependency, but it's used in the sample router below.

2. Create a tRPC router​

Implement your tRPC router. A sample router is given below:

server.ts
ts
import { initTRPC } from '@trpc/server';
import { z } from 'zod';
export const t = initTRPC.create();
export const appRouter = t.router({
getUser: t.procedure.input(z.string()).query((req) => {
req.input; // string
return { id: req.input, name: 'Bilbo' };
}),
createUser: t.procedure
.input(z.object({ name: z.string().min(5) }))
.mutation(async (req) => {
// use your ORM of choice
return await UserModel.create({
data: req.input,
});
}),
});
// export type definition of API
export type AppRouter = typeof appRouter;
server.ts
ts
import { initTRPC } from '@trpc/server';
import { z } from 'zod';
export const t = initTRPC.create();
export const appRouter = t.router({
getUser: t.procedure.input(z.string()).query((req) => {
req.input; // string
return { id: req.input, name: 'Bilbo' };
}),
createUser: t.procedure
.input(z.object({ name: z.string().min(5) }))
.mutation(async (req) => {
// use your ORM of choice
return await UserModel.create({
data: req.input,
});
}),
});
// export type definition of API
export type AppRouter = typeof appRouter;

If your router file starts getting too big, split your router into several subrouters each implemented in its own file. Then merge them into a single root appRouter.

3. Use the Express adapter​

tRPC includes an adapter for Express out of the box. This adapter lets you convert your tRPC router into an Express middleware.

server.ts
ts
import { inferAsyncReturnType, initTRPC } from '@trpc/server';
import * as trpcExpress from '@trpc/server/adapters/express';
// created for each request
const createContext = ({
req,
res,
}: trpcExpress.CreateExpressContextOptions) => ({}); // no context
type Context = inferAsyncReturnType<typeof createContext>;
const t = initTRPC.context<Context>().create();
const appRouter = t.router({
// [...]
});
const app = express();
app.use(
'/trpc',
trpcExpress.createExpressMiddleware({
router: appRouter,
createContext,
}),
);
app.listen(4000);
server.ts
ts
import { inferAsyncReturnType, initTRPC } from '@trpc/server';
import * as trpcExpress from '@trpc/server/adapters/express';
// created for each request
const createContext = ({
req,
res,
}: trpcExpress.CreateExpressContextOptions) => ({}); // no context
type Context = inferAsyncReturnType<typeof createContext>;
const t = initTRPC.context<Context>().create();
const appRouter = t.router({
// [...]
});
const app = express();
app.use(
'/trpc',
trpcExpress.createExpressMiddleware({
router: appRouter,
createContext,
}),
);
app.listen(4000);

Your endpoints are now available via HTTP!

EndpointHTTP URI
getUserGET http://localhost:4000/trpc/getUser?input=INPUT

where INPUT is a URI-encoded JSON string.
createUserPOST http://localhost:4000/trpc/createUser

with req.body of type {name: string}