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--- |
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id: queries |
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title: Queries |
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--- |
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## Query Basics |
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A query is a declarative dependency on an asynchronous source of data that is tied to a **unique key**. A query can be used with any Promise based method (including GET and POST methods) to fetch data from a server. If your method modifies data on the server, we recommend using [Mutations](../mutations.md) instead. |
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To subscribe to a query in your components or custom hooks, call the `useQuery` hook with at least: |
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- A **unique key for the query** |
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- A function that returns a promise that: |
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- Resolves the data, or |
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- Throws an error |
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[//]: # 'Example' |
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```tsx |
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import { useQuery } from '@tanstack/react-query' |
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function App() { |
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const info = useQuery({ queryKey: ['todos'], queryFn: fetchTodoList }) |
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} |
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``` |
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[//]: # 'Example' |
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The **unique key** you provide is used internally for refetching, caching, and sharing your queries throughout your application. |
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The query result returned by `useQuery` contains all of the information about the query that you'll need for templating and any other usage of the data: |
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[//]: # 'Example2' |
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```tsx |
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const result = useQuery({ queryKey: ['todos'], queryFn: fetchTodoList }) |
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``` |
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[//]: # 'Example2' |
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The `result` object contains a few very important states you'll need to be aware of to be productive. A query can only be in one of the following states at any given moment: |
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- `isPending` or `status === 'pending'` - The query has no data yet |
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- `isError` or `status === 'error'` - The query encountered an error |
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- `isSuccess` or `status === 'success'` - The query was successful and data is available |
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Beyond those primary states, more information is available depending on the state of the query: |
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- `error` - If the query is in an `isError` state, the error is available via the `error` property. |
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- `data` - If the query is in an `isSuccess` state, the data is available via the `data` property. |
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- `isFetching` - In any state, if the query is fetching at any time (including background refetching) `isFetching` will be `true`. |
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For **most** queries, it's usually sufficient to check for the `isPending` state, then the `isError` state, then finally, assume that the data is available and render the successful state: |
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[//]: # 'Example3' |
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```tsx |
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function Todos() { |
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const { isPending, isError, data, error } = useQuery({ |
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queryKey: ['todos'], |
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queryFn: fetchTodoList, |
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}) |
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if (isPending) { |
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return <span>Loading...</span> |
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} |
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if (isError) { |
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return <span>Error: {error.message}</span> |
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} |
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// We can assume by this point that `isSuccess === true` |
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return ( |
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<ul> |
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{data.map((todo) => ( |
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<li key={todo.id}>{todo.title}</li> |
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))} |
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</ul> |
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) |
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} |
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``` |
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[//]: # 'Example3' |
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If booleans aren't your thing, you can always use the `status` state as well: |
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[//]: # 'Example4' |
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```tsx |
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function Todos() { |
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const { status, data, error } = useQuery({ |
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queryKey: ['todos'], |
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queryFn: fetchTodoList, |
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}) |
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if (status === 'pending') { |
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return <span>Loading...</span> |
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} |
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if (status === 'error') { |
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return <span>Error: {error.message}</span> |
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} |
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// also status === 'success', but "else" logic works, too |
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return ( |
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<ul> |
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{data.map((todo) => ( |
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<li key={todo.id}>{todo.title}</li> |
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))} |
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</ul> |
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) |
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} |
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``` |
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[//]: # 'Example4' |
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TypeScript will also narrow the type of `data` correctly if you've checked for `pending` and `error` before accessing it. |
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### FetchStatus |
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In addition to the `status` field, you will also get an additional `fetchStatus` property with the following options: |
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- `fetchStatus === 'fetching'` - The query is currently fetching. |
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- `fetchStatus === 'paused'` - The query wanted to fetch, but it is paused. Read more about this in the [Network Mode](../network-mode.md) guide. |
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- `fetchStatus === 'idle'` - The query is not doing anything at the moment. |
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### Why two different states? |
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Background refetches and stale-while-revalidate logic make all combinations for `status` and `fetchStatus` possible. For example: |
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- a query in `success` status will usually be in `idle` fetchStatus, but it could also be in `fetching` if a background refetch is happening. |
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- a query that mounts and has no data will usually be in `pending` status and `fetching` fetchStatus, but it could also be `paused` if there is no network connection. |
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So keep in mind that a query can be in `pending` state without actually fetching data. As a rule of thumb: |
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- The `status` gives information about the `data`: Do we have any or not? |
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- The `fetchStatus` gives information about the `queryFn`: Is it running or not? |
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[//]: # 'Materials' |
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## Further Reading |
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For an alternative way of performing status checks, have a look at the [Community Resources](../../community/tkdodos-blog.md#4-status-checks-in-react-query). |
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[//]: # 'Materials' |
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