firestore-livehooks
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1.0.1 • Public • Published

firestore-livehooks

This package solves the common design pattern where a React component wants to show a collection from Firestore that live-updates (i.e. that subscribes to Firestore changes and updates the UI).

Installation

npm install firestore-livehooks or yarn add firestore-livehooks. The package assumes you're using React or React Native, and also that you're using some flavor of Firestore (whether the Web SDK or perhaps react-native-firebase).

Usage

Most people will just use the useLiveQueryResult hook. Some might use the reconcileSnapshotChanges utility function directly.

useLiveQueryResult

This hook returns an up-to-date array reflecting the Firestore query you specify. The result will reflect ongoing changes you make that might impact the results of the underlying query. It does this by subscribing to changes on your query and reconciling those changes with an in-memory cache of past data.

function MyReactComponent() {
  const latestTime = 8675309;
  const todoList = useLiveQueryResult(
    useCallback( // more on this below
      () => firebase
        .firestore()
        .collection("todos")
        .where("timestamp", ">=", latestTime),
      [latestTime]
    ),
    getTodoID, // Function that extracts a key from the type of item in your collection
  );
  
  return (
    <View>
      { todoList.map(t => renderTodo(t)) }
    </View>
  );
}

function getTodoID(todo: Todo) {
  return todo.id;
}

The code above will keep todoList up to date with the latest changes, whether you add/remove/update the todos from elsewhere in the code. Note that you should pass callbacks for both parameters of useLiveQueryResult that do not change upon re-renders -- otherwise, the hook will keep thinking you've changed its inputs and keep resubscribing to the collection and causing a rendering loop.

So: do not just pass firestore.firebase().collection("todos") to useLiveQueryResult — if you do, every time MyReactComponent re-renders, useLiveQueryResult will cause yet another re-render because it will think you've changed its inputs. Instead, useCallback or useMemo to keep those changes to a minimum. In the above example, useLiveQueryResult will only change its query subscription when latestTime changes, which is exactly what you want.

reconcileSnapshotChanges

This is a utility function that you might find useful to directly use at times, though most people will just need useLiveQueryResult. reconcileSnapshotChanges takes a snapshot and integrates all its changes into an in-memory Map of existing objects. This saves you the trouble of having to deal with added, removed, and modified change types yourself.

  const myTodos = useRef(new Map());
  
  useEffect(() => {
    function onNewBootlegs(snap: QuerySnapshot) {
      // You want myTodos as a ref, not just as a `new Map()` directly, because
      // you don't want the closure here to capture a version of the map that's
      // different from subsequent renders.
      reconcileSnapshotChanges(snap, myTodos.current, getTodoID);
    }
    
    return firebase.firestore().collections("bootlegs").onSnapshot(onNewBootlegs);
  }, []);
  
  return (
    <View>{/* use myTodos.current somehow */}</View>
  );

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Install

npm i firestore-livehooks

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Version

1.0.1

License

MIT

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  • fivecar