useSuspenseQueries
There is no isLoading or isError in the return type of this hook. This is because <Suspense/>
and <ErrorBoundary/>
guarantee the data of this hook. Also, in the options of this hook, suspense is set to true by default. You can use @tanstack/react-query’s useQueries for the new options you need.
import { useSuspenseQueries } from '@suspensive/react-query'
const Example = () => {
const [query1, query2] = useSuspenseQueries({
queries: [
{ queryKey: [1], queryFn },
{ queryKey: [2], queryFn },
],
}) // suspense: true is the default.
// No type narrowing required with isSuccess.
query1.data // TData
query2.data // TData
}
Motivation
You can use useQueries with <Suspense/>
and <ErrorBoundary/>
by using the suspense option of @tanstack/react-query useQueries.
import { useQueries } from '@tanstack/react-query'
const Example = () => {
const [query1, query2] = useQueries({
queries: [
{ queryKey: [1], queryFn, suspense: true },
{ queryKey: [2], queryFn, suspense: true },
],
})
query1.data // TData | undefined
query2.data // TData | undefined
if (query1.isSuccess) {
query.data // TData
}
if (query2.isSuccess) {
query.data // TData
}
}
The return type of useQueries (query1.data, query2.data) will always be a success case thanks to this component’s parents, <Suspense/>
and <ErrorBoundary/>
.
But @tanstack/react-query doesn’t express this typologically.
That’s why @suspensive/react-query provides useSuspenseQueries.
Focus on successful cases.
Now we can focus only on successful cases as fetching always succeeds inside our component.