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react-apollo
Advanced tools
React Apollo allows you to fetch data from your GraphQL server and use it in building complex and reactive UIs using the React framework. React Apollo may be used in any context that React may be used. In the browser, in React Native, or in Node.js when you want to do server-side rendering.
React Apollo unlike many other tools in the React ecosystem requires no complex build setup to get up and running. As long as you have a GraphQL server you can get started building out your application with React immediately. React Apollo works out of the box with both create-react-app
and React Native with a single install and with no extra hassle configuring Babel or other JavaScript tools.
React Apollo is:
Get started today on the app you’ve been dreaming of, and let React Apollo take you to the moon!
It is simple to install React Apollo and related libraries
# installing the preset package (apollo-boost) and react integration
npm install apollo-boost react-apollo graphql-tag graphql --save
# installing each piece independently
npm install apollo-client apollo-cache-inmemory apollo-link-http react-apollo graphql-tag graphql --save
apollo-boost is a minimal config way to start using Apollo Client. It includes some sensible defaults, such as InMemoryCache
and HttpLink
.
That’s it! You may now use React Apollo in any of your React environments.
For an amazing developer experience you may also install the Apollo Client Developer tools for Chrome which will give you inspectability into your React Apollo data.
Looking for apollo 1.x docs? See here.
To get started you will first want to create an instance of ApolloClient
and then you will want to provide that client to your React component tree using the <ApolloProvider/>
component. Finally, we will show you a basic example of connecting your GraphQL data to your React components with the <Query>
component.
First we want an instance of ApolloClient
. We can import the class from apollo-client
.
To get started, create an ApolloClient instance and point it at your GraphQL server:
import { ApolloClient } from 'apollo-client';
import { HttpLink } from 'apollo-link-http';
import { InMemoryCache } from 'apollo-cache-inmemory';
const client = new ApolloClient({
// By default, this client will send queries to the
// `/graphql` endpoint on the same host
// Pass the configuration option { uri: YOUR_GRAPHQL_API_URL } to the `HttpLink` to connect
// to a different host
link: new HttpLink(),
cache: new InMemoryCache(),
});
If you're using apollo-boost, you can create an ApolloClient
that uses HttpLink
and InMemoryCache
like so:
import ApolloClient from 'apollo-boost';
const client = new ApolloClient();
Migrating from 1.x? See the 2.0 migration guide.
Next you will want to add a <ApolloProvider/>
component to the root of your React component tree. This component provides the React Apollo functionality to all the other components in the application without passing it explicitly. To use an <ApolloProvider/>
with your newly constructed client see the following:
import { ApolloProvider } from 'react-apollo';
ReactDOM.render(
<ApolloProvider client={client}>
<MyRootComponent />
</ApolloProvider>,
document.getElementById('root'),
);
Now you may create components in this React tree that are connected to your GraphQL API.
Finally, to demonstrate the power of React Apollo in building interactive UIs let us connect one of your components to your GraphQL server using the <Query>
component:
You'll need install graphql-tag
to use gql
module:
npm install graphql-tag --save
import gql from 'graphql-tag';
import { Query } from 'react-apollo';
const GET_DOGS = gql`
{
dogs {
id
breed
}
}
`;
const Dogs = ({ onDogSelected }) => (
<Query query={GET_DOGS}>
{({ loading, error, data }) => {
if (loading) return 'Loading...';
if (error) return `Error! ${error.message}`;
return (
<select name="dog" onChange={onDogSelected}>
{data.dogs.map(dog => (
<option key={dog.id} value={dog.breed}>
{dog.breed}
</option>
))}
</select>
);
}}
</Query>
);
If you render Dogs within your App component, you’ll first see a loading state and then a form with a list of dog breeds once Apollo Client receives the data from the server.
To learn more about querying with React Apollo be sure to start reading the documentation article on Queries. If you would like to see all of the features React Apollo supports be sure to check out the complete API reference.
React Apollo makes use of Object.assign
, which is not supported in certain browsers (most prominently, IE11). If you wish to support legacy browsers, you will need to import a polyfill. As an example, you could use core-js
's polyfill like so:
import 'core-js/fn/object/assign';
The react-apollo
package is designed to be effectively consumed by bundlers that understand either CommonJS require
syntax or ECMASCript import
and export
syntax, such as Rollup, Webpack, or Parcel. If your bundler supports tree-shaking, it should be able to eliminate unused code from the react-apollo
package, regardless of which module syntax you're using.
You should (almost) never need to reach into the react-apollo/...
internals to import specific modules. The only supported exceptions are react-apollo/test-links
, react-apollo/test-utils
, and react-apollo/walkTree
(deprecated).
When minifying your application, you can make the react-apollo
package noticeably smaller by configuring your minifier to replace the expression process.env.NODE_ENV
with a string literal (typically "production"
). Other packages such as React use the same convention, so there's a good chance you already have your minifier configured in this way.
For a complete React Apollo API reference visit the documentation website at: https://www.apollographql.com/docs/react/api/react-apollo.html
All of the documentation for React Apollo including usage articles and helpful recipes lives on: https://www.apollographql.com/docs/react/
FAQs
React Apollo Hooks, Components, and HOC.
The npm package react-apollo receives a total of 78,857 weekly downloads. As such, react-apollo popularity was classified as popular.
We found that react-apollo demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 8 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
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