Awesome
useFetch
useFetch
is a React hook that supports the React 16.6 Suspense component
implementation.
The design decisions and development process for this package are outlined in the Medium article React Suspense with the Fetch API.
Install
npm install fetch-suspense
oryarn add fetch-suspense
Examples
Basic Example
import useFetch from 'fetch-suspense';
import React, { Suspense } from 'react';
// This fetching component will be delayed by Suspense until the fetch request
// resolves. The return value of useFetch will be the response of the server.
const MyFetchingComponent = () => {
const response = useFetch('/path/to/api', { method: 'POST' });
return 'The server responded with: ' + response;
};
// The App component wraps the asynchronous fetching component in Suspense.
// The fallback component (loading text) is displayed until the fetch request
// resolves.
const App = () => {
return (
<Suspense fallback="Loading...">
<MyFetchingComponent />
</Suspense>
);
};
Using a Custom Fetch API
If you don't want to rely on the global fetch
API, you can create your own
useFetch
hook by importing the createUseFetch
helper function.
import { createUseFetch } from 'fetch-suspense';
import myFetchApi from 'my-fetch-package';
import React, { Suspense } from 'react';
// Create a useFetch hook using one's own Fetch API.
// NOTE: useFetch hereafter refers to this constant, not the default export of
// the fetch-suspense package.
const useFetch = createUseFetch(myFetchApi);
// This fetching component will be delayed by Suspense until the fetch request
// resolves. The return value of useFetch will be the response of the server.
const MyFetchingComponent = () => {
const response = useFetch('/path/to/api', { method: 'POST' });
return 'The server responded with: ' + response;
};
// The App component wraps the asynchronous fetching component in Suspense.
// The fallback component (loading text) is displayed until the fetch request
// resolves.
const App = () => {
return (
<Suspense fallback="Loading...">
<MyFetchingComponent />
</Suspense>
);
};
Including Fetch Metadata
To include fetch metadata with your response, include an options
parameter
with metadata: true
.
import useFetch from 'fetch-suspense';
import React, { Suspense } from 'react';
// This fetching component will be delayed by Suspense until the fetch request
// resolves. The return value of useFetch will be the response of the server
// AS WELL AS metadata for the request.
const MyFetchingComponent = () => {
const { contentType, response } = useFetch(
'/path/to/api',
{ method: 'POST' },
{ metadata: true }, // <--
);
return `The server responded with ${contentType}: ${response}`;
};
// The App component wraps the asynchronous fetching component in Suspense.
// The fallback component (loading text) is displayed until the fetch request
// resolves.
const App = () => {
return (
<Suspense fallback="Loading...">
<MyFetchingComponent />
</Suspense>
);
};
Options
The supported options for the third, options parameter are:
lifespan?: number
Default: 0
The number of milliseconds to cache the result of the request. Each time the component mounts before this many milliseconds have passed, it will return the response from the last time this same request was made.
If 0, the cache will be last the remainder of the browser session.
metadata?: boolean
Default: false
If true, the useFetch
hook will return metadata in addition to the response
from the fetch request. Instead of returning just the response, an interface
as follows will be returned:
interface UseFetchResponse {
bodyUsed: boolean;
contentType: null | string;
headers: Headers;
ok: boolean;
redirected: boolean;
// The same response from the server that would be returned if metadata were
// false. It is an Object is the server responded with JSON, and it is a
// string if the server responded with plain text.
response: Object | string;
status: number;
statusText: string;
url: string;
}
You can access these properties easily through destructuring. See Including Fetch Metadata.
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