how does axios handle blob vs arraybuffer as responseType?

From axios docs:

// `responseType` indicates the type of data that the server will respond with
// options are: 'arraybuffer', 'document', 'json', 'text', 'stream'
//   browser only: 'blob'
responseType: 'json', // default

'blob' is a “browser only” option.

So from node.js, when you set responseType: "blob", "json"will actually be used, which I guess fallbacks to "text" when no parse-able JSON data has been fetched.

Fetching binary data as text is prone to generate corrupted data.
Because the text returned by Body.text() and many other APIs are USVStrings (they don’t allow unpaired surrogate codepoints ) and because the response is decoded as UTF-8, some bytes from the binary file can’t be mapped to characters correctly and will thus be replaced by � (U+FFDD) replacement character, with no way to get back what that data was before: your data is corrupted.

Here is a snippet explaining this, using the header of a .png file 0x89 0x50 0x4E 0x47 as an example.

(async () => {

  const url="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/47/PNG_transparency_demonstration_1.png";
  // fetch as binary
  const buffer = await fetch( url ).then(resp => resp.arrayBuffer());

  const header = new Uint8Array( buffer ).slice( 0, 4 );
  console.log( 'binary header', header ); // [ 137, 80, 78, 61 ]
  console.log( 'entity encoded', entityEncode( header ) );
  // [ "U+0089", "U+0050", "U+004E", "U+0047" ]
  // You can read more about  (U+0089) character here
  // https://www.fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/0089/index.htm
  // You can see in the left table how this character in UTF-8 needs two bytes (0xC2 0x89)
  // We thus can't map this character correctly in UTF-8 from the UTF-16 codePoint,
  // it will get discarded by the parser and converted to the replacement character
  
  // read as UTF-8 
  const utf8_str = await new Blob( [ header ] ).text();
  console.log( 'read as UTF-8', utf8_str ); // "�PNG"
  // build back a binary array from that string
  const utf8_binary = [ ...utf8_str ].map( char => char.charCodeAt( 0 ) );
  console.log( 'Which is binary', utf8_binary ); // [ 65533, 80, 78, 61 ]
  console.log( 'entity encoded', entityEncode( utf8_binary ) );
  // [ "U+FFDD", "U+0050", "U+004E", "U+0047" ]
  // You can read more about character � (U+FFDD) here
  // https://www.fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/0fffd/index.htm
  //
  // P (U+0050), N (U+004E) and G (U+0047) characters are compatible between UTF-8 and UTF-16
  // For these there is no encoding lost
  // (that's how base64 encoding makes it possible to send binary data as text)
  
  // now let's see what fetching as text holds
  const fetched_as_text = await fetch( url ).then( resp => resp.text() );
  const header_as_text = fetched_as_text.slice( 0, 4 );
  console.log( 'fetched as "text"', header_as_text ); // "�PNG"
  const as_text_binary = [ ...header_as_text ].map( char => char.charCodeAt( 0 ) );
  console.log( 'Which is binary', as_text_binary ); // [ 65533, 80, 78, 61 ]
  console.log( 'entity encoded', entityEncode( as_text_binary ) );
  // [ "U+FFDD", "U+0050", "U+004E", "U+0047" ]
  // It's been read as UTF-8, we lost the first byte.
  
})();

function entityEncode( arr ) {
  return Array.from( arr ).map( val => 'U+' + toHex( val ) );
}
function toHex( num ) {
  return num.toString( 16 ).padStart(4, '0').toUpperCase();
}

There is natively no Blob object in node.js, so it makes sense axios didn’t monkey-patch it just so they can return a response no-one else would be able to consume anyway.

From a browser, you’d have exactly the same responses:

function fetchAs( type ) {
  return axios( {
    method: 'get',
    url: 'https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/47/PNG_transparency_demonstration_1.png',
    responseType: type
  } );
}

function loadImage( data, type ) {
  // we can all pass them to the Blob constructor directly
  const new_blob = new Blob( [ data ], { type: 'image/jpg' } );
  // with blob: URI, the browser will try to load 'data' as-is
  const url = URL.createObjectURL( new_blob );
  
  img = document.getElementById( type + '_img' );
  img.src = url;
  return new Promise( (res, rej) => { 
    img.onload = e => res(img);
    img.onerror = rej;
  } );
}

[
  'json', // will fail
  'text', // will fail
  'arraybuffer',
  'blob'
].forEach( type =>
  fetchAs( type )
   .then( resp => loadImage( resp.data, type ) )
   .then( img => console.log( type, 'loaded' ) )
   .catch( err => console.error( type, 'failed' ) )
);
<script src="https://unpkg.com/axios/dist/axios.min.js"></script>

<figure>
  <figcaption>json</figcaption>
  <img id="json_img">
</figure>
<figure>
  <figcaption>text</figcaption>
  <img id="text_img">
</figure>
<figure>
  <figcaption>arraybuffer</figcaption>
  <img id="arraybuffer_img">
</figure>
<figure>
  <figcaption>blob</figcaption>
  <img id="blob_img">
</figure>

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