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@cutting/react-abortable-fetch
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0.36.4 • Public • Published

@cutting/react-abortable-fetch

Quick Start

Show instructions

Here is the simplest form of using react-abortable-fetch:

# npm
npm install @cutting/react-abortable-fetch

# yarn
yarn add @cutting/react-abortable-fetch
import { useFetch } from '@cutting/react-abortable-fetch';

const { data, error, state } = useFetch(`/api/users/1`);

if (state === 'loading') {
  return <div>loading...</div>
}

if (error) {
  return <div>Houston, we have a problem</dov>
}

return <SomeComponent data={data}/>

Here is a codesandbox with a more complex example.

codesandboxes

Table of contents

Why

For crying out loud, why have you created yet another react-query or use-query or use-fetch clone? Are you serious?

Yes, because I am frustrated with what is out there.

Packages like react-query are excellent, but they are becoming quite bloated and complicated when all I want to do is to call an endpoint. I need to spend time learning how to configure a custom React context and a whole bunch of other stuff when all I want to do is give a function a URL and, I am good to go.

Here are some other annoyances:

  • I want to be productive ASAP. I don't want to have to read a lot of documentation or have to join a discord channel to learn how to use the package.

  • Give me intelligent defaults. I think there is still way too much setup and config in any useQueryXXX or useFetchXXX thingy that I have tried. JavaScript/Typescript has descended into a sea of endless configuration which means I have to understand everything intimately to use it.

  • Packages like react-query are excellent, but I still have to provide the code to use axios or fetch or whatever, surely the whole point of using a package like this is to abstract all that stuff away. This package uses cross-fetch and you cannot change this. I am predicting that you do not need to.

  • I want abort to be a first-class citizen and not left up to me to get my hands dirty with AbortControllers.

  • I want an adjustable timeout, queries should not be allowed to run forever. I don't want to have to roll my own logic.

  • I want to run more than one query.

  • I don't want to deal with cache keys. The framework should handle this.

    I really, really, really do NOT want to do stuff like this:

    useOverlyComplicatedFetch(['/api/users', id], (url, id) => query(url, { id }))
  • I don't want to configure a react context to execute a single query. The context should be optional.

  • I really, really, really do not want a set of conflicting and contradictory boolean flags like isLoading, isError etc. I want a mutually exclusive state string union that can only ever be one value?

    type State = 'ready' | 'loading' | 'succeeded' | 'error' | 'aborted';
  • I needed json and jsonp

I could go on, but I will leave it there for now....

Examples

Simple but nice

Give me a URL and the framework will do the rest. I am personally weary of endless configuration when all I want to do is this:

codesandbox

const { data, error } = useFetch(`/api/users/1`);

if (typeof data !== 'undefined') {
  console.log(data);
}

or if you want to invoke the query in a button click handler, then you can do this:

codesandbox

const { run, state } = useFetch(`/api/users/1`, { executeOnMount: false });

// or use a combination of Request and RequestInfo
// const { run, state } = useFetch({url: `/api/users/1`, method: 'POST'}, { executeOnMount: false });

return (
  <button
    disabled={state !== 'ready'}
    onClick={() => {
      run({ an: 'object'});  // by default objects will be seriaized to json
    }}
  >
    DO IT
  </button>
);

or

Multi Queries

codesandbox

I wrote this package because I could not find anything that did multi-queries and had first class abort functionality.

There are a couple of ways of executing multi queries.

Just load up the URLs into an array and optionally use some of the handlers:

  const { run, data, state, abort, reset } = useFetch<Result[], Product>(
    [
      "https://reqres.in/api/products/1?delay=1",
      "https://reqres.in/api/products/2?delay=1",
      "https://reqres.in/api/products/3?delay=1",
      "https://reqres.in/api/products/4?delay=1",
      "https://reqres.in/api/products/5?delay=1",
      "https://reqres.in/api/products/6?delay=1",
      "https://reqres.in/api/products/7?delay=1",
      "https://reqres.in/api/products/8?delay=1",
      "https://reqres.in/api/products/9?delay=1",
      "https://reqres.in/api/products/10?delay=1"
    ],
    // or use a combination of Request and RequestInfo
    // const { run, data, state, abort, reset } = useFetch<Result[], Product>(
    // [
    //  {url: "https://reqres.in/api/products/1?delay=1", method: 'POST'}
    //  {url: "https://reqres.in/api/products/1?delay=2", method: 'POST'}
    //  etc.
    {
      initialState: [],
      executeOnMount: false,
      accumulator(acc, current) {
        acc.push({
          id: current.data.id,
          name: current.data.name,
          year: current.data.year
        });
        return acc;
      },
      onQuerySuccess(product) {
        assert(!!product, `no product in onQuerySuccess`);

        setProgress((n) => (n += 1));
        setMessages((m) => {
          m.push(`received product ${product.data.name}`);
          return m;
        });
      },
      onSuccess: (result) => {
        console.log(result);
        console.log(`Downloaded ${result?.length} products`);
      },
      onAbort: () => {
        setMessages(["We have aborted"]);
      },
      onError: (e) => {
        console.log("in global error handler");
        console.error(e.message);
      }
    }
  );

---
// Now we really need abort
<button onClick={() => abort()}>
  CANCEL
</button>

Builder Syntax

Alternatively, useFetch can take a builder function that provides a fetchClient object with an addFetchRequest function.

const { state, abort, data } = useFetch(
  (fetchClient) => {
    for (const i of [...Array.from({ length: 10 }).keys()]) {
      fetchClient.addFetchRequest(`/api/users/${i + 1}`, {
        onQuerySuccess: (d) => console.log('you can add a different handler for each query'),
        onQueryError(e) {
          console.log(`scoped error handler`);
          console.error(e);
        },
      });
    }

    return fetchClient;
  },
  {
    onQuerySuccess: (d) => console.log('optional handler that gets called when a query has completed successfully'),
    initialState: [],
    onSuccess: () => {
      console.log(`optional onSuccess handler`);
    },
    onAbort: () => {
      console.log('optional onAbort' )
    },
    onError: (e) => {
      console.log('optional onError handler');
      console.error(e.message);
    },
  },
);

Accumulation

When executing multiple queries, think of useFetch like a reduce or a fold function.

Default accumulation

If the initialState field is an array, then useFetch will append the result of each async fetch onto the initialState.

const { data } = useFetch(
  [ '/add/1/1', '/add/2/2', '/add/3/3' ],
  {
    initialState: []
  },
);

if (typeof data !== 'undefined') {
  console.log(data); // [2, 4, 6];
}

Custom accumlator function

You can supply an accumulator function that executes each time a remote query resolves. You can build up the final result in this accumulator function.

const { data } = useFetch(
  [ '/add/1/1', '/add/2/2', '/add/3/3' ],
  {
    initialState: 0,
    accumulator: (acc, current) => acc + current.answer,
  },
);

if( typeof data !== 'undefined') {
  console.log(`the grand total is ${data}`),  // the grand total is 12
}

WARNING! The operations should be commutative because there is no guarantee when the async functions will return.

Nested-Queries

codesandbox

A common scenario is to run one or more async request with the results of the first request. The [Accumulation][#Accumulation] function can also run async and an AccumulationContext is supplied to the accumulator function as the 3rd argument.

useFetch<Vendor[], typeof vendors>('http://localhost:3000/vendors', {
  executeOnMount: false,
  onSuccess,
  onError,
  onAbort,
  initialState: [],
  accumulator: async (acc, v, { fetcher }) => {
    for (const vendor of v.data) {
      const request = await fetcher(`http://localhost:3000/vendors/${vendor.id}/items`);

      const items = await request.json();

      acc.push({
        ...vendor,
        ...items,
      });
    }

    return acc;
  },
}),

The AccumulationContext has a fetcher field that is the fetch object that you can run queries against.

The AccumulationContext has the following fields:

export interface AccumulationContext {
  request: RequestInfo;
  fetcher: typeof nativeFetch | typeof fetchJsonp;
}

codesandbox

Retries

By default react-abortable-fetch will retry any request that returns a non 2xx range response 3 times with a 500ms delay.

The retryAttempts and retryDelay properties can configure this differently:

const { data, error } = useFetch(`/flaky-connection`, {
  retryAttempts: 5,
  retryDelay: 1000,
});

Timeout

By default each fetch request has a generous default timeout property of 180000ms to complete before timing out.

API

useFetch(string url or array of string urls, or builder, [options])

Example

const { state, abort, reset, run } = useFetch(
  [ '/add/1/1', '/add/2/2', '/add/3/3' ],
  {
    initialState: 0,
    accumulator: (acc, current) => acc + current.answer,
    retryAttempts: 5,
    retryDelay: 100,
    timeout: 500000,
    method: 'POST',
    fetchTye: 'jsonp',
    executeOnMount: false,
    onQuerySuccess: (d) => console.log('optional handler that gets called when a single query has completed successfully'),
    onSuccess: () => {
      console.log(`optional overall onSuccess handler`);
    },
    onAbort: () => {
      console.log('optional onAbort' )
    },
    onError: (e) => {
      console.log('optional onError handler');
      console.error(e.message);
    },
  },
);
Prop Description Default
initialState The initial value. Can be important for accumulation and multiple queries. THe initial state can be built up or accumulated as each query resolves. undefined
accumulator function that can be used to transform the result of every query. default-accumulator.ts
method http verb, GET, POST, PUT or DELETE etc. GET
executeOnMount whether or not the remote fetch executes after the DOM paint event a controversial true
fetchType which fetch to call. The default fetch will use cross-fetch or fetch-jsonp. fetch
retryAttempts how many times a fetch operation will be retried 3
retryDelay the time in ms between each retry in the event of a fail 500
timeout The length of time each request is allowed to run without a response before aborting 5000ms
onSuccess callback that is called with the either the result of a single value or if running multiple queries then the accumulated result no op
onError callback that is called with the error in the event of a failed query
onQuerySuccess everytime a query resolves, this function is called with the result of the fetch query. no op
onQueryError handler for individual query errors no op

Typescript

The useFetch function signature looks like this:

export function useFetch<R, T = undefined>(url: string, options?: UseFetchOptions<R, T>): QueryResult<R>;
export function useFetch<R, T = undefined>(urls: string[], options?: UseFetchOptions<R, T>): QueryResult<R>;
export function useFetch<R, T = undefined>(
  fetchRequestInfo: FetchRequestInfo,
  options?: UseFetchOptions<R, T>,
): QueryResult<R>;
export function useFetch<R, T = undefined>(
  fetchRequestInfo: FetchRequestInfo[],
  options?: UseFetchOptions<R, T>,
): QueryResult<R>;
export function useFetch<R, T = undefined>(builder: Builder<R, T>, options?: UseFetchOptions<R, T>): QueryResult<R>;
export function useFetch<R, T = undefined>(
  builderOrRequestInfos: string | string[] | FetchRequestInfo | FetchRequestInfo[] | Builder<R, T>,
  options: UseFetchOptions<R, T> = {},
): QueryResult<R> {
  • A is the type for the data that is returned from a fetcg request.

  • R is the type for the end result of a useFetch operation. R will default to A if it is not explicitly set. Consider the example below where the data returned from of an individual fetch is { answer: number } but the end result of applying the accumlator function to all the requests is a number type.

    const { data } = useFetch<{ answer: number }, number>(
      ['http://localhost:3000/add/1/1', 'http://localhost:3000/add/2/2', 'http://localhost:3000/add/3/3'],
      {
        initialState: 0,
        accumulator: (acc, current) => acc + current.answer,  // current is type { answer: number }
      }
    
      if ( data ) {
        console.log(typeof data); // number
      }

Type inference

useFetch will infer the A type from the initialState field if this property has been set

const { data } = useFetch(
  ['http://localhost:3000/add/1/1', 'http://localhost:3000/add/2/2', 'http://localhost:3000/add/3/3'],
  {
    initialState: 0, 
  }


  if ( data ) {
    console.log(typeof data); // number
  }

If initialState is an empty array then adding a simple type assertion will type the data type A

const { data } = useFetch(
  ['http://localhost:3000/add/1/1', 'http://localhost:3000/add/2/2', 'http://localhost:3000/add/3/3'],
  {
    initialState: [] as { answer: number }[], 
  }


  if ( data ) {
    for (const question of data) {  // data is typed as array of { answer: number }
      console.log(question.answer);
    }
  }

TODO

  • progress
  • fetch client outside of react
  • pagination
  • load more
  • graphql
  • allow processing of results in order if required
  • global configuration via context (still do not want to do this)

Dependents (1)

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Install

npm i @cutting/react-abortable-fetch

Weekly Downloads

15

Version

0.36.4

License

MIT

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Total Files

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  • cutting