Awesome
Found Relay
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<!-- END doctoc generated TOC please keep comment here to allow auto update --> <!-- prettier-ignore-end -->Usage
import { BrowserProtocol, queryMiddleware } from 'farce';
import {
createFarceRouter,
createRender,
makeRouteConfig,
Route,
} from 'found';
import { Resolver } from 'found-relay';
/* ... */
const Router = createFarceRouter({
historyProtocol: new BrowserProtocol(),
historyMiddlewares: [queryMiddleware],
routeConfig: makeRouteConfig(
<Route
path="/"
Component={Application}
query={graphql`
query app_Application_Query {
viewer {
...Application_viewer
}
}
`}
>
<Route path="widgets">
<Route
Component={WidgetList}
query={graphql`
query app_WidgetList_Query {
widgets {
...WidgetList_widgets
}
}
`}
prepareVariables={prepareWidgetListVariables}
/>
<Route
path=":name"
Component={Widget}
query={graphql`
query app_Widget_Query($name: String!) {
widget(name: $name) {
...Widget_widget
}
}
`}
render={({ props }) => (props ? <Widget {...props} /> : <Loading />)}
/>
</Route>
</Route>,
),
render: createRender({}),
});
ReactDOM.render(
<Router resolver={new Resolver(environment)} />,
document.getElementById('root'),
);
Examples
Guide
Installation
$ npm i -S farce found react react-relay
$ npm i -S found-relay
Router configuration
Create a router component class using createFarceRouter
or a lower-level API. Create a Resolver
with your Relay environment, then use that as the resolver
instead of the default Found resolver.
import { BrowserProtocol, queryMiddleware } from 'farce';
import { createFarceRouter, createRender } from 'found';
import { Resolver } from 'found-relay';
/* ... */
const Router = createFarceRouter({
historyProtocol: new BrowserProtocol(),
historyMiddlewares: [queryMiddleware],
routeConfig,
render: createRender({}),
});
ReactDOM.render(
<Router resolver={new Resolver(environment)} />,
document.getElementById('root'),
);
Route configuration
Route configuration works similarly to that in Found, but instead of data
or getData
, routes accept properties that control Relay data fetching. Each route behaves as if it were its own <QueryRenderer>
, except that all data fetching happens in parallel, even for nested routes. Found Relay routes accept the following properties:
query
orgetQuery
: the Relay query for the route, or a method that returns the Relay query for the routecacheConfig
orgetCacheConfig
: the cache configuration for the route, or a method that returns the cache configuration for the routefetchPolicy
orgetFetchPolicy
: the fetch policy for the Relay data for the route, or a method that returns the fetch policy for the Relay data for the route;network-only
(the default),store-and-network
, orstore-or-network
prepareVariables
: a method to apply additional transformations to the route variablesrender
: as on Found, a method that returns the element for the route, but with additional properties
Note that Found Relay routes ignore data
, getData
, and defer
.
query
or getQuery
To inject Relay data into a route, specify query
or getQuery
on the route. The value should be a Relay query. In general, Component
for this route will likely be a fragment container, and the query should compose the fragment or fragments from Component
.
By default, the available variables for the query will be the accumulated path parameters for this route and its parents. To customize these variables or inject additional ones from the routing state, use prepareVariables
as described below.
As with <QueryRenderer>
, upon routing, the route will not refetch its data if its query and variables are the same. To force refetching upon navigation even when the query and variables stay the same, use prepareVariables
below to add a nonce variable.
cacheConfig
or getCacheConfig
As on <QueryRenderer>
, this value will be forwarded directly to the network layer.
fetchPolicy
As on <QueryRenderer>
, this controls the fetch policy for data for the route. In addition to network-only
and store-and-network
as on <QueryRenderer>
, this can also take the value store-or-network
, which bypasses the network fetch entirely when the data are available in the store.
prepareVariables
By default, the available variables for the route query will be the accumulated path parameters for this route and its parents. If specified, the prepareVariables
callback receives the accumulated variables used from all parent routes and the current route match. It should return the updated variables for this route, which will also be accumulated into the variables used for all child routes.
const widgetListRoute = (
<Route
path="widgets"
Component={WidgetList}
query={graphql`
query app_WidgetList_Query($color: String, $size: String, $limit: Int) {
widgets(color: $color, size: $size, limit: $limit) {
...WidgetList_widgets
}
}
`}
prepareVariables={(params, { location }) => {
const { color, size } = location.query;
const limit = location.state && location.state.limit;
return {
...params,
color,
size: size && parseInt(size, 10),
limit: limit || 10,
};
}}
/>
);
render
This behaves identically to render
in Found, except its render arguments object receives the following additional properties:
error
: the Relay error, if any, as onrender
on<QueryRenderer>
retry
: when available, a callback that will refetch the data for the route, as on<QueryRenderer>
environment
: the current Relay environmentvariables
: an object containing the Relay variables used for the routeresolving
: a boolean indicating whether the route is rendering as part of router navigation resolution rather than due to a subsequent store update; in general, it is only safe to throwHttpError
orRedirectException
instances to trigger navigation whenresolving
istrue
If render
returns a truthy value, then the rendered element will also subscribe to Relay store updates.