A query function can be literally any function that returns a promise. The promise that is returned should either resolve the data or throw an error.
All of the following are valid query function configurations:
useQuery(['todos', todoId], fetchTodoById)useQuery(['todos', todoId], () => fetchTodoById(todoId))useQuery(['todos', todoId], async () => {const data = await fetchTodoById(todoId)return data})
For React Query to determine a query has errored, the query function must throw. Any error that is thrown in the query function will be persisted on the error
state of the query.
const { error } = useQuery(['todos', todoId], async () => {if (somethingGoesWrong) {throw new Error('Oh no!')}return data})
fetch
and others clients that do not throw by defaultWhile most utilities like axios
or graphql-request
automatically throw errors for unsuccessful HTTP calls, some utilities like fetch
do not throw errors by default. If that's the case, you'll need to throw them on your own. Here is a simple way to do that with the popular fetch
API:
useQuery(['todos', todoId], async () => {const { ok, json } = await fetch('/todos/' + todoId)if (!ok) {throw new Error('Network response was not ok')}return json()})
Query keys are not just for uniquely identifying the data you are fetching, but are also conveniently passed into your query function and while not always necessary, this makes it possible to extract your query functions if needed:
function Todos({ completed }) {const result = useQuery(['todos', { status, page }], fetchTodoList)}// Access the key, status and page variables in your query function!function fetchTodoList({ queryKey }) {const [_key, { status, page }] = queryKeyreturn new Promise()}
Anywhere the [queryKey, queryFn, config]
signature is supported throughout React Query's API, you can also use an object to express the same configuration:
import { useQuery } from 'react-query'useQuery({queryKey: ['todo', 7],queryFn: fetchTodo,...config,})
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