Rendering lists that can additively "load more" data onto an existing set of data or "infinite scroll" is also a very common UI pattern. React Query supports a useful version of useQuery
called useInfiniteQuery
for querying these types of lists.
When using useInfiniteQuery
, you'll notice a few things are different:
data
is now an object containing infinite query data:data.pages
array containing the fetched pagesdata.pageParams
array containing the page params used to fetch the pagesfetchNextPage
and fetchPreviousPage
functions are now availablegetNextPageParam
and getPreviousPageParam
options are available for both determining if there is more data to load and the information to fetch it. This information is supplied as an additional parameter in the query function (which can optionally be overridden when calling the fetchNextPage
or fetchPreviousPage
functions)hasNextPage
boolean is now available and is true
if getNextPageParam
returns a value other than undefined
hasPreviousPage
boolean is now available and is true
if getPreviousPageParam
returns a value other than undefined
isFetchingNextPage
and isFetchingPreviousPage
booleans are now available to distinguish between a background refresh state and a loading more stateNote: When using options like
initialData
orselect
in your query, make sure that when you restructure your data that it still includesdata.pages
anddata.pageParams
properties, otherwise your changes will be overwritten by the query in its return!
Let's assume we have an API that returns pages of projects
3 at a time based on a cursor
index along with a cursor that can be used to fetch the next group of projects:
fetch('/api/projects?cursor=0')// { data: [...], nextCursor: 3}fetch('/api/projects?cursor=3')// { data: [...], nextCursor: 6}fetch('/api/projects?cursor=6')// { data: [...], nextCursor: 9}fetch('/api/projects?cursor=9')// { data: [...] }
With this information, we can create a "Load More" UI by:
useInfiniteQuery
to request the first group of data by defaultgetNextPageParam
fetchNextPage
functionNote: It's very important you do not call
fetchNextPage
with arguments unless you want them to override thepageParam
data returned from thegetNextPageParam
function. e.g. Do not do this:<button onClick={fetchNextPage} />
as this would send the onClick event to thefetchNextPage
function.
import { useInfiniteQuery } from 'react-query'function Projects() {const fetchProjects = ({ pageParam = 0 }) =>fetch('/api/projects?cursor=' + pageParam)const {data,error,fetchNextPage,hasNextPage,isFetching,isFetchingNextPage,status,} = useInfiniteQuery('projects', fetchProjects, {getNextPageParam: (lastPage, pages) => lastPage.nextCursor,})return status === 'loading' ? (<p>Loading...</p>) : status === 'error' ? (<p>Error: {error.message}</p>) : (<>{data.pages.map((group, i) => (<React.Fragment key={i}>{group.projects.map(project => (<p key={project.id}>{project.name}</p>))}</React.Fragment>))}<div><buttononClick={() => fetchNextPage()}disabled={!hasNextPage || isFetchingNextPage}>{isFetchingNextPage? 'Loading more...': hasNextPage? 'Load More': 'Nothing more to load'}</button></div><div>{isFetching && !isFetchingNextPage ? 'Fetching...' : null}</div></>)}
When an infinite query becomes stale
and needs to be refetched, each group is fetched sequentially
, starting from the first one. This ensures that even if the underlying data is mutated, we're not using stale cursors and potentially getting duplicates or skipping records. If an infinite query's results are ever removed from the queryCache, the pagination restarts at the initial state with only the initial group being requested.
By default, the variable returned from getNextPageParam
will be supplied to the query function, but in some cases, you may want to override this. You can pass custom variables to the fetchNextPage
function which will override the default variable like so:
function Projects() {const fetchProjects = ({ pageParam = 0 }) =>fetch('/api/projects?cursor=' + pageParam)const {status,data,isFetching,isFetchingNextPage,fetchNextPage,hasNextPage,} = useInfiniteQuery('projects', fetchProjects, {getNextPageParam: (lastPage, pages) => lastPage.nextCursor,})// Pass your own page paramconst skipToCursor50 = () => fetchNextPage({ pageParam: 50 })}
Bi-directional lists can be implemented by using the getPreviousPageParam
, fetchPreviousPage
, hasPreviousPage
and isFetchingPreviousPage
properties and functions.
useInfiniteQuery('projects', fetchProjects, {getNextPageParam: (lastPage, pages) => lastPage.nextCursor,getPreviousPageParam: (firstPage, pages) => firstPage.prevCursor,})
Sometimes you may want to show the pages in reversed order. If this is case, you can use the select
option:
useInfiniteQuery('projects', fetchProjects, {select: data => ({pages: [...data.pages].reverse(),pageParams: [...data.pageParams].reverse(),}),})
Manually removing first page:
queryClient.setQueryData('projects', data => ({pages: data.pages.slice(1),pageParams: data.pageParams.slice(1),}))
Manually removing a single value from an individual page:
const newPagesArray = []oldPagesArray?.pages.forEach(page => {const newData = page.filter(val => val.id !== updatedId)newPagesArray.push(newData)})queryClient.setQueryData('projects', data => ({pages: newPagesArray,pageParams: data.pageParams,}))
Make sure to keep the same data structure of pages and pageParams!
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