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@preact-signals/query
Advanced tools
A reactive utility for React/Preact that simplifies the handling of data fetching and state management. Powered by Preact Signals, it provides hooks and functions to create reactive resources and manage their state seamlessly.
@preact-signals/query
@preact-signals/query
acts as a bridge between the core functionality of @tanstack/query-core
and the reactivity provided by @preact/signals
. Designed as a drop-in replacement for @tanstack/react-query
, this library not only mirrors its counterpart's functionalities but also offers enhanced hooks tailored for preact signals.
You should be sure that one of preact signals runtimes installed:
@preact/signals
for preact
, it requires additional step@preact/signals-react
for react
Fetch @preact-signals/query
via your preferred package manager:
# Using npm
npm install @preact-signals/query
# Using yarn
yarn add @preact-signals/query
# Using pnpm
pnpm add @preact-signals/query
@preact/signals
additional step:You should resolve @preact/signals-react
as @preact/signals
To do it take a look at how to resolve react
as preact
and do it with signals. Plus you need to dedupe preact
import preact from "@preact/preset-vite";
import { defineConfig } from "vite";
// https://vitejs.dev/config/
export default defineConfig({
plugins: [preact()],
resolve: {
// add this line
dedupe: ["preact"],
alias: [
{ find: "react", replacement: "preact/compat" },
{ find: "react-dom/test-utils", replacement: "preact/test-utils" },
{ find: "react-dom", replacement: "preact/compat" },
{ find: "react/jsx-runtime", replacement: "preact/jsx-runtime" },
// add this line
{ find: "@preact/signals-react", replacement: "@preact/signals" },
],
},
});
useQuery$, useInfiniteQuery$
useMutation$
useQueryClient$
useIsFetching$
useQuery$
and useInfiniteQuery$
Experience the reactive elegance of @tanstack/react-query
with @preact-signals/query
.
Although @preact-signals/query
adopts the API of @tanstack/react-query
, it comes with additional hooks that are specifically optimized for preact signals. You'll recognize these hooks by the appended $
sign:
useQuery$
, useInfiniteQuery$
useMutation$
useQueryClient$
useIsFetching$
Awaited hooks include:
useQueries$
useIsMutating$
useQuery$, useInfiniteQuery$
useQuery$
stands as the reactive counterpart to useQuery
from @tanstack/react-query
. Instead of the usual reactive object, this hook yields a flat-store.
Primary Differences:
options
that returns StaticQueryOptions
, as they're executed once initially and then reused when reactivity comes into play.suspense
and useErrorBoundary
are demand-triggered. They're invoked at the exact moment the data
field is accessed.onError
, onSettled
, and onSuccess
are phased out in react-query
, these aren't implemented in reactive query hooks.const isUserRegistered = useSignal(false);
const query = useQuery$(() => ({
queryKey: ["user"],
queryFn: () => fetchUser(),
enabled: isUserRegistered.value,
}));
return (
<>
<button onClick={() => (isUserRegistered.value = !isUserRegistered.value)}>
Toggle Registration
</button>
<Show when={() => query.data}>
{(data) => <div>Name: {data().name}</div>}
</Show>
</>
);
const query = useQuery$(() => ({
queryKey: ["key"],
queryFn: fetchStatistics,
suspense: true,
}));
return (
<>
<Profile />
<Jokes />
{/* Here, only this segment will enter suspense mode */}
<Suspense fallback={<Loader />}>
<Show when={() => query.data}>
{(data) => (
<ul>
{data().map((item) => (
<li key={item.label}>{item.data}</li>
))}
</ul>
)}
</Show>
</Suspense>
</>
);
useMutation$
Functionally similar to the query$ hooks, with a couple of nuances:
useErrorBoundary
isn't available. It's under evaluation for its utility.const mutation = useMutation$(() => ({
mutationFn: doSomething,
onError: (error) => {
console.error("doSomething failed", error);
},
onSuccess: (data) => {
console.log("wow we've done something", data);
},
}));
return <button onClick={mutation.mutate}>Execute Mutation</button>;
useQueryClient$
This hook returns the client, encapsulated in signals.
useIsFetching$
Accepts a reactive callback returning filter options and provides an accessor for the result.
// returns ReadonlySignal<number>
const overallFetching = useIsFetching$(() => null);
const specificFetchCount = useIsFetching$(() => ({
queryFn: ["123"],
}));
return (
<>
<div>Total fetching queries (unoptimized): {overallFetching.value}</div>
<div>
Total fetching queries (optimized, no rerenders): {overallFetching}
</div>
<div>
Fetch count by key (optimized, no rerenders): {specificFetchCount}
</div>
</>
);
useQuery$
and useInfiniteQuery$
If you turn suspense on, the query will fetch after component render (if data
is not accessed) or on the first access of data
. But you can alter this behavior with suspenseBehavior
option (load-on-access
is default).
suspend-eagerly
- executes and suspends the query on mount. Data field will always be loaded. Helpful to be access data without worry about .data
field will throw a Promise.suspend-on-access
- pre executes a query, but suspends only on first access of .data
field. Helpful to suspend child components if passing accessor as prop.load-on-access
- executes query on first access of .data
field or if unused on useEffect
. Legacy behavior, will be changed to suspend-on-access
in next major release.const query = useQuery$(() => ({
queryKey: ["key"],
queryFn: fetchStatistics,
suspense: true,
suspenseBehavior: "suspend-eagerly",
}));
@preact-signals/query
is distributed under the MIT License.
FAQs
A reactive utility for React/Preact that simplifies the handling of data fetching and state management. Powered by Preact Signals, it provides hooks and functions to create reactive resources and manage their state seamlessly.
We found that @preact-signals/query demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
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