Awesome
This project is no longer actively maintained. The approach this project takes is so-called useEffect chaining, which will not be a best pracitce in the future versions of React. This would be still useful for learning and might work for small projects. React community should move to new data fetching approach, or at least approach to fire a single async function in useEffect. See also: https://github.com/dai-shi/react-hooks-async/issues/64
react-hooks-async
React custom hooks for async functions with abortability and composability
Introduction
JavaScript promises are not abortable/cancelable. However, DOM provides AbortController which can be used for aborting promises in general.
This is a library to provide an easy way to handle abortable async functions with React Hooks API.
It comes with a collection of custom hooks that can be used as is. More custom hooks can be developed based on core hooks.
Install
npm install react-hooks-async
Usage
A basic async example (run immediately)
import React from 'react';
import { useAsyncTask, useAsyncRun } from 'react-hooks-async';
const fetchStarwarsHero = async ({ signal }, id) => {
const response = await fetch(`https://swapi.co/api/people/${id}/`, { signal });
const data = await response.json();
return data;
};
const StarwarsHero = ({ id }) => {
const task = useAsyncTask(fetchStarwarsHero);
useAsyncRun(task, id);
const { pending, error, result, abort } = task;
if (pending) return <div>Loading...<button onClick={abort}>Abort</button></div>;
if (error) return <div>Error: {error.name} {error.message}</div>;
return <div>Name: {result.name}</div>;
};
const App = () => (
<div>
<StarwarsHero id={'1'} />
<StarwarsHero id={'2'} />
</div>
);
A basic async example (run in callback)
import React, { useState } from 'react';
import { useAsyncTask } from 'react-hooks-async';
const fetchStarwarsHero = async ({ signal }, id) => {
const response = await fetch(`https://swapi.co/api/people/${id}/`, { signal });
const data = await response.json();
return data;
};
const StarwarsHero = () => {
const { start, started, result } = useAsyncTask(fetchStarwarsHero);
const [id, setId] = useState('');
return (
<div>
<input value={id} onChange={e => setId(e.target.value)} />
<button type="button" onClick={() => start(id)}>Fetch</button>
{started && 'Fetching...'}
<div>Name: {result && result.name}</div>
</div>
);
};
const App = () => (
<div>
<StarwarsHero />
<StarwarsHero />
</div>
);
A simple fetch example
import React from 'react';
import { useFetch } from 'react-hooks-async';
const UserInfo = ({ id }) => {
const url = `https://reqres.in/api/users/${id}?delay=1`;
const { pending, error, result, abort } = useFetch(url);
if (pending) return <div>Loading...<button onClick={abort}>Abort</button></div>;
if (error) return <div>Error: {error.name} {error.message}</div>;
return <div>First Name: {result.data.first_name}</div>;
};
const App = () => (
<div>
<UserInfo id={'1'} />
<UserInfo id={'2'} />
</div>
);
A typeahead search example using combination
<img src="./examples/04_typeahead/screencast.gif" alt="Preview" width="350" />import React, { useState, useCallback } from 'react';
import {
useAsyncCombineSeq,
useAsyncRun,
useAsyncTaskDelay,
useAsyncTaskFetch,
} from 'react-hooks-async';
const Err = ({ error }) => <div>Error: {error.name} {error.message}</div>;
const Loading = ({ abort }) => <div>Loading...<button onClick={abort}>Abort</button></div>;
const GitHubSearch = ({ query }) => {
const url = `https://api.github.com/search/repositories?q=${query}`;
const delayTask = useAsyncTaskDelay(500);
const fetchTask = useAsyncTaskFetch(url);
const combinedTask = useAsyncCombineSeq(delayTask, fetchTask);
useAsyncRun(combinedTask);
if (delayTask.pending) return <div>Waiting...</div>;
if (fetchTask.error) return <Err error={fetchTask.error} />;
if (fetchTask.pending) return <Loading abort={fetchTask.abort} />;
return (
<ul>
{fetchTask.result.items.map(({ id, name, html_url }) => (
<li key={id}><a target="_blank" href={html_url}>{name}</a></li>
))}
</ul>
);
};
const App = () => {
const [query, setQuery] = useState('');
return (
<div>
Query:
<input value={query} onChange={e => setQuery(e.target.value)} />
{query && <GitHubSearch query={query} />}
</div>
);
};
Examples
The examples folder contains working examples. You can run one of them with
PORT=8080 npm run examples:01_minimal
and open http://localhost:8080 in your web browser.
You can also try them in codesandbox.io: 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
Reference
Note: Almost all hooks check referential equality of arguments. Arguments must be memoized if they would change in re-renders. Consider defining them outside of render, or useMemo/useMemoOne/useCallback/useCallbackOne.
States
State | Description |
---|---|
started | Initial false. Becomes true once the task is started. Becomes false when the task ends |
pending | Initial true. Stays true after the task is started. Becomes false when the task ends |
An example,
- initial: started=false, pending=true
- first start: started=true, pending=true
- first end: started=false, pending=false
- second start: started=true, pending=true
- second end: started=false, pending=false
Core hooks
useAsyncTask
const task = useAsyncTask(func);
This function is to create a new async task.
The first argument func
is a function with an argument
which is AbortController. This function returns a promise,
but the function is responsible to cancel the promise by AbortController.
If func
receives the second or rest arguments, those can be passed by
useAsyncRun(task, ...args)
or task.start(...args)
.
When func
is referentially changed, a new async task will be created.
The return value task
is an object that contains information about
the state of the task and some internal information.
The state of the task can be destructured like the following:
const { pending, error, result } = task;
When a task is created, it's not started.
To run a task, either
call useAsyncRun(task, [...args])
in render, or
call task.start([...args])
in callback.
useAsyncRun
useAsyncRun(task, ...args);
This function is to run an async task. When the task is updated, this function aborts the previous running task and start the new one.
The first argument task
is an object returned by useAsyncTask
and its variants. This can be a falsy value and in that case
it won't run any tasks. Hence, it's possible to control the timing by:
useAsyncRun(ready && task);
The second or rest arguments are optional. If they are provided, the referential equality matters, so useMemo/useMemoOne would be necessary.
The return value of this function is void
.
You need to keep using task
to get the state of the task.
Combining hooks
useAsyncCombineSeq
const combinedTask = useAsyncCombineSeq(task1, task2, ...);
This function combines multiple tasks in a sequential manner.
The arguments task1
, task2
, ... are tasks created by useAsyncTask
.
They shouldn't be started.
The return value combinedTask
is a newly created combined task which
holds an array of each task results in the result property.
useAsyncCombineAll
const combinedTask = useAsyncCombineAll(task1, task2, ...);
This function combines multiple tasks in a parallel manner.
The arguments and return value are the same as useAsyncCombineSeq
.
useAsyncCombineRace
const combinedTask = useAsyncCombineRace(task1, task2, ...);
This function combines multiple tasks in a "race" manner.
The arguments and return value are the same as useAsyncCombineSeq
.
Helper hooks
These hooks are just wrappers of useAsyncTask
.
useAsyncTaskTimeout
const task = useAsyncTaskTimeout(func, delay);
This function returns an async task that runs func
after delay
ms.
When func
is referentially changed, a new async task will be created.
useAsyncTaskDelay
const task = useAsyncTaskDelay(delay);
This function returns an async task that finishes after delay
.
This is a simpler variant of useAsyncTaskTimeout
.
delay
is either a number or a function that returns a number.
When delay
is referentially changed, a new async task will be created.
useAsyncTaskFetch
const task = useAsyncTaskFetch(input, init, bodyReader);
This function returns an async task that runs
fetch.
The first argument input
and the second argument init
are simply fed into fetch
. The third argument bodyReader
is to read the response body, which defaults to JSON parser.
When input
or other arguments is referentially changed, a new async task will be created.
The hook useFetch
has the same signature and runs the async task immediately.
useAsyncTaskAxios
const task = useAsyncTaskAxios(axios, config);
This is similar to useAsyncTaskFetch
but using
axios.
When config
or other arguments is referentially changed, a new async task will be created.
The hook useAxios
has the same signature and runs the async task immediately.
useAsyncTaskWasm
const task = useAsyncTaskWasm(input, importObject);
This function returns an async task that fetches wasm
and creates a WebAssembly instance.
The first argument input
is simply fed into fetch
.
The second argument importObject
is passed at instantiating WebAssembly.
When input
or other arguments is referentially changed, a new async task will be created.
The hook useWasm
has the same signature and runs the async task immediately.
Limitations
- Due to the nature of React Hooks API, creating async tasks dynamically is not possible. For example, we cannot create arbitrary numbers of async tasks at runtime. For such a complex use case, we would use other solutions including upcoming react-cache and Suspense.