
Research
2025 Report: Destructive Malware in Open Source Packages
Destructive malware is rising across open source registries, using delays and kill switches to wipe code, break builds, and disrupt CI/CD.
@acrool/react-fetcher
Advanced tools
This is a toast message function for React development notifications
^1.1.0 support react >=18.0.0 <20.0.0
@acrool/react-portal and framer-motionyarn add @acrool/react-fetcher
add in your index.tsx
import "@acrool/react-fetcher/dist/index.css";
add in your App.tsx
import {BlockPortal} from "@acrool/react-fetcher";
const App = () => {
return (
<div>
<BaseUsed/>
<BlockPortal
isVisibleQueueKey={false}
loader={<Loader/>}
defaultMessage="Loading..."
/>
</div>
);
};
then in your page
import {block} from '@acrool/react-fetcher';
import {useEffect} from "react";
const Example = () => {
useEffect(() => {
block.show();
setTimeout(() => {
block.hide();
}, 3000)
}, []);
return (
<div>
sample page
</div>
);
};
There is also a example that you can play with it:
FAQs
Fetcher library based for Reactjs
The npm package @acrool/react-fetcher receives a total of 186 weekly downloads. As such, @acrool/react-fetcher popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @acrool/react-fetcher demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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