Managed, cancelable and safely typed requests.
# Yarn
yarn add react-request-hook axios
# NPM
npm install --save react-request-hook axios
import {RequestProvider} from 'react-request-hook';
import axios from 'axios';
// More info about configuration: https://github.com/axios/axios#axioscreateconfig
const axiosInstance = axios.create({
baseURL: 'https://example.com/',
});
ReactDOM.render(
<RequestProvider value={axiosInstance}>
<App />
</RequestProvider>,
document.getElementById('root'),
);
// User Profile component
function UserProfile(props) {
const [profile, getProfile] = useResource(id => ({
url: `/user/${id}`,
method: 'GET'
}))
useEffect(() => getProfile(props.userId), [])
if(profile.isLoading) return <Spinner />
return (
<ProfileScreen
avatar={profile.data.avatar}
email={profile.data.email}
name={profile.data.name} />
)
}
The useResource
hook manages the request state under the hood. Its high-level API allows one request to be made at a time. Subsequent requests cancel the previous ones, leaving the call to be made with the most recent data available. The API is intended to be similar to useState
and useEffect
.
It requires a function as the first argument that is just a request config factory and returns a tuple with the resource state and a function to trigger the request call, which accepts the same arguments as the factory one.
const [comments, getComments] = useResource(id => ({
url: `/post/${id}/comments`,
method: 'get',
}));
The request function returns a canceler that allows you to easily cancel a request on a cleaning phase of a hook.
useEffect(() => {
if (props.isDialogOpen) {
return getComments(props.postId);
}
}, [props.isDialogOpen]);
interface Resource {
isLoading: boolean;
// same as `response.data` resolved from the axios promise
data: Payload<Request> | null;
// Shortcut function to cancel a pending request
cancel: (message?: string) => void;
// normalized error
error: RequestError | null;
}
The request can also be triggered passing its arguments as dependencies to the useResource hook.
const [comments] = useResource(
(id: string) => ({
url: `/post/${id}/comments`,
method: 'get',
}),
[props.postId],
);
It has the same behavior as useEffect
. Changing those values triggers another request and cancels the previous one if it's still pending.
If you want more control over the request calls or the ability to call multiple requests from the same resource or not at the same time, you can rely on the useRequest hook.
This hook is used internally by useResource. It's responsible for creating the request function and manage the cancel tokens that are being created on each of its calls. This hook also normalizes the error response (if any) and provides a helper that cancel all pending request.
It accepts the same function signature as useResource
(a function that returns an object with the Axios request config).
const [request, createRequest] = useRequest((id: string) => ({
url: `/post/${id}/comments`,
method: 'get',
}));
interface CreateRequest {
// same args used on the callback provided to the hook
(...args): {
// cancel the requests created on this factory
cancel: (message?: string) => void;
ready: () => Promise;
};
}
interface Request {
hasPending: boolean;
// clear all pending requests
clear: (message?: string) => void;
}
By using it, you're responsible for handling the promise resolution. It's still canceling pending requests when unmounting the component.
useEffect(() => {
const {ready, cancel} = createRequest(props.postId);
ready()
.then(setState)
.catch(error => {
if (error.isCancel === false) {
setError(error);
}
});
return cancel;
}, [props.postId]);
The request
function allows you to define the response type coming from it. It also helps with creating a good pattern on defining your API calls and the expected results. It's just an identity function that accepts the request config and returns it. Both useRequest
and useResource
extract the expected and annotated type definition and resolve it on the response.data
field.
const api = {
getUsers: () => {
return request<Users>({
url: '/users',
method: 'GET',
});
},
getUserPosts: (userId: string) => {
return request<Posts>({
url: `/users/${userId}/posts`,
method: 'GET',
});
},
};
The createRequestError
normalizes the error response. This function is used internally as well. The isCancel
flag is returned, so you don't have to call axios.isCancel later on the promise catch block.
interface RequestError {
// same as `response.data`, where response is the object coming from the axios promise
data: Payload<Request>;
message: Error['message'];
// code on the `data` field, `error.code` or `error.response.status`
// in the order
code: number | string;
}
This library is entirely written in typescript, so depending on your editor you might have all the type hints out of the box. However, we also provide a payload field to be attached to the request config object, which allows you to define and use the typings for the payload of a given request. We believe that this motivates a better and clean code as we're dealing with some of the most substantial parts of our app implementation.
const api = {
getUsers: () => {
return {
url: '/users',
method: 'GET',
payload: [{
id: String(),
age: Number(),
likesVideoGame: Boolean(),
}],
});
},
};
And you'll have
You can try out react-request-hook right in your browser with the Codesandbox example.
The example folder contains a /components
folder with different use cases, like infinite scrolling components, search input that triggers the API, and so on. It's currently a work in progress.
Thanks to @kentcdodds for making this implementation a lot easier to test. create-react-library for the initial setup and Grommet with its great components used in the examples.
MIT