QueryClient
QueryClient
The QueryClient
can be used to interact with a cache:
import { QueryClient } from "react-query";
const queryClient = new QueryClient({
defaultOptions: {
queries: {
staleTime: Infinity,
},
},
});
await queryClient.prefetchQuery("posts", fetchPosts);
Its available methods are:
QueryClient
queryClient.fetchQuery
queryClient.fetchInfiniteQuery
queryClient.prefetchQuery
queryClient.prefetchInfiniteQuery
queryClient.getQueryData
queryClient.getQueriesData
queryClient.setQueryData
queryClient.getQueryState
queryClient.setQueriesData
queryClient.invalidateQueries
queryClient.refetchQueries
queryClient.cancelQueries
queryClient.removeQueries
queryClient.resetQueries
queryClient.isFetching
queryClient.isMutating
queryClient.getDefaultOptions
queryClient.setDefaultOptions
queryClient.getQueryDefaults
queryClient.setQueryDefaults
queryClient.getMutationDefaults
queryClient.setMutationDefaults
queryClient.getQueryCache
queryClient.getMutationCache
queryClient.clear
Options
queryCache?: QueryCache
- Optional
- The query cache this client is connected to.
mutationCache?: MutationCache
- Optional
- The mutation cache this client is connected to.
defaultOptions?: DefaultOptions
- Optional
- Define defaults for all queries and mutations using this queryClient.
queryClient.fetchQuery
fetchQuery
is an asynchronous method that can be used to fetch and cache a query. It will either resolve with the data or throw with the error. Use the prefetchQuery
method if you just want to fetch a query without needing the result.
If the query exists and the data is not invalidated or older than the given staleTime
, then the data from the cache will be returned. Otherwise it will try to fetch the latest data.
The difference between using
fetchQuery
andsetQueryData
is thatfetchQuery
is async and will ensure that duplicate requests for this query are not created withuseQuery
instances for the same query are rendered while the data is fetching.
try {
const data = await queryClient.fetchQuery(queryKey, queryFn);
} catch (error) {
console.log(error);
}
Specify a staleTime
to only fetch when the data is older than a certain amount of time:
try {
const data = await queryClient.fetchQuery(queryKey, queryFn, {
staleTime: 10000,
});
} catch (error) {
console.log(error);
}
Options
The options for fetchQuery
are exactly the same as those of useQuery
, except the following: enabled, refetchInterval, refetchIntervalInBackground, refetchOnWindowFocus, refetchOnReconnect, notifyOnChangeProps, notifyOnChangePropsExclusions, onSuccess, onError, onSettled, useErrorBoundary, select, suspense, keepPreviousData, placeholderData
; which are strictly for useQuery and useInfiniteQuery. You can check the source code for more clarity.
Returns
Promise<TData>
queryClient.fetchInfiniteQuery
fetchInfiniteQuery
is similar to fetchQuery
but can be used to fetch and cache an infinite query.
try {
const data = await queryClient.fetchInfiniteQuery(queryKey, queryFn);
console.log(data.pages);
} catch (error) {
console.log(error);
}
Options
The options for fetchInfiniteQuery
are exactly the same as those of fetchQuery
.
Returns
Promise<InfiniteData<TData>>
queryClient.prefetchQuery
prefetchQuery
is an asynchronous method that can be used to prefetch a query before it is needed or rendered with useQuery
and friends. The method works the same as fetchQuery
except that it will not throw or return any data.
await queryClient.prefetchQuery(queryKey, queryFn);
You can even use it with a default queryFn in your config!
await queryClient.prefetchQuery(queryKey);
Options
The options for prefetchQuery
are exactly the same as those of fetchQuery
.
Returns
Promise<void>
- A promise is returned that will either immediately resolve if no fetch is needed or after the query has been executed. It will not return any data or throw any errors.
queryClient.prefetchInfiniteQuery
prefetchInfiniteQuery
is similar to prefetchQuery
but can be used to prefetch and cache an infinite query.
await queryClient.prefetchInfiniteQuery(queryKey, queryFn);
Options
The options for prefetchInfiniteQuery
are exactly the same as those of fetchQuery
.
Returns
Promise<void>
- A promise is returned that will either immediately resolve if no fetch is needed or after the query has been executed. It will not return any data or throw any errors.
queryClient.getQueryData
getQueryData
is a synchronous function that can be used to get an existing query's cached data. If the query does not exist, undefined
will be returned.
const data = queryClient.getQueryData(queryKey);
Options
queryKey?: QueryKey
: Query Keysfilters?: QueryFilters
: Query Filters
Returns
data: TData | undefined
- The data for the cached query, or
undefined
if the query does not exist.
- The data for the cached query, or
queryClient.getQueriesData
getQueriesData
is a synchronous function that can be used to get the cached data of multiple queries. Only queries that match the passed queryKey or queryFilter will be returned. If there are no matching queries, an empty array will be returned.
const data = queryClient.getQueriesData(queryKey | filters);
Options
queryKey: QueryKey
: Query Keys |filters: QueryFilters
: Query Filters- if a queryKey is passed as the argument, the data with queryKeys fuzzily matching this param will be returned
- if a filter is passed, the data with queryKeys matching the filter will be returned
Returns
[queryKey:QueryKey, data:TData | unknown][]
- An array of tuples for the matched query keys, or
[]
if there are no matches. The tuples are the query key and its associated data.
- An array of tuples for the matched query keys, or
Caveats
Because the returned data in each tuple can be of varying structures (i.e. using a filter to return "active" queries can return different data types), the TData
generic defaults to unknown
. If you provide a more specific type to TData
it is assumed that you are certain each tuple's data entry is all the same type.
This distinction is more a "convenience" for ts devs that know which structure will be returned.
queryClient.setQueryData
setQueryData
is a synchronous function that can be used to immediately update a query's cached data. If the query does not exist, it will be created. If the query is not utilized by a query hook in the default cacheTime
of 5 minutes, the query will be garbage collected. To update multiple queries at once and match query keys partially, you need to use queryClient.setQueriesData
instead.
The difference between using
setQueryData
andfetchQuery
is thatsetQueryData
is sync and assumes that you already synchronously have the data available. If you need to fetch the data asynchronously, it's suggested that you either refetch the query key or usefetchQuery
to handle the asynchronous fetch.
queryClient.setQueryData(queryKey, updater);
Options
queryKey: QueryKey
: Query Keysupdater: TData | (oldData: TData | undefined) => TData
- If non-function is passed, the data will be updated to this value
- If a function is passed, it will receive the old data value and be expected to return a new one.
Using an updater value
setQueryData(queryKey, newData);
Using an updater function
For convenience in syntax, you can also pass an updater function which receives the current data value and returns the new one:
setQueryData(queryKey, (oldData) => newData);
queryClient.getQueryState
getQueryState
is a synchronous function that can be used to get an existing query's state. If the query does not exist, undefined
will be returned.
const state = queryClient.getQueryState(queryKey);
console.log(state.dataUpdatedAt);
Options
queryKey?: QueryKey
: Query Keysfilters?: QueryFilters
: Query Filters
queryClient.setQueriesData
setQueriesData
is a synchronous function that can be used to immediately update cached data of multiple queries by using filter function or partially matching the query key. Only queries that match the passed queryKey or queryFilter will be updated - no new cache entries will be created. Under the hood, setQueryData
is called for each query.
queryClient.setQueriesData(queryKey | filters, updater);
Options
queryKey: QueryKey
: Query Keys |filters: QueryFilters
: Query Filters- if a queryKey is passed as first argument, queryKeys partially matching this param will be updated
- if a filter is passed, queryKeys matching the filter will be updated
updater: TData | (oldData: TData | undefined) => TData
- the setQueryData updater function or new data, will be called for each matching queryKey
queryClient.invalidateQueries
The invalidateQueries
method can be used to invalidate and refetch single or multiple queries in the cache based on their query keys or any other functionally accessible property/state of the query. By default, all matching queries are immediately marked as invalid and active queries are refetched in the background.
- If you do not want active queries to refetch, and simply be marked as invalid, you can use the
refetchActive: false
option. - If you want inactive queries to refetch as well, use the
refetchInactive: true
option
await queryClient.invalidateQueries(
"posts",
{
exact,
refetchActive: true,
refetchInactive: false,
},
{ throwOnError },
);
Options
queryKey?: QueryKey
: Query Keysfilters?: QueryFilters
: Query FiltersrefetchActive: Boolean
- Defaults to
true
- When set to
false
, queries that match the refetch predicate and are actively being rendered viauseQuery
and friends will NOT be refetched in the background, and only marked as invalid.
- Defaults to
refetchInactive: Boolean
- Defaults to
false
- When set to
true
, queries that match the refetch predicate and are not being rendered viauseQuery
and friends will be both marked as invalid and also refetched in the background
- Defaults to
refetchPage: (page: TData, index: number, allPages: TData[]) => boolean
- Only for Infinite Queries
- Use this function to specify which pages should be refetched
refetchOptions?: RefetchOptions
:throwOnError?: boolean
- When set to
true
, this method will throw if any of the query refetch tasks fail.
- When set to
queryClient.refetchQueries
The refetchQueries
method can be used to refetch queries based on certain conditions.
Examples:
// refetch all queries:
await queryClient.refetchQueries();
// refetch all stale queries:
await queryClient.refetchQueries({ stale: true });
// refetch all active queries partially matching a query key:
await queryClient.refetchQueries(["posts"], { active: true });
// refetch all active queries exactly matching a query key:
await queryClient.refetchQueries(["posts", 1], { active: true, exact: true });
Options
queryKey?: QueryKey
: Query Keysfilters?: QueryFilters
: Query FiltersrefetchPage: (page: TData, index: number, allPages: TData[]) => boolean
- Only for Infinite Queries
- Use this function to specify which pages should be refetched
refetchOptions?: RefetchOptions
:throwOnError?: boolean
- When set to
true
, this method will throw if any of the query refetch tasks fail.
- When set to
Returns
This function returns a promise that will resolve when all of the queries are done being refetched. By default, it will not throw an error if any of those queries refetches fail, but this can be configured by setting the throwOnError
option to true
queryClient.cancelQueries
The cancelQueries
method can be used to cancel outgoing queries based on their query keys or any other functionally accessible property/state of the query.
This is most useful when performing optimistic updates since you will likely need to cancel any outgoing query refetches so they don't clobber your optimistic update when they resolve.
await queryClient.cancelQueries("posts", { exact: true });
Options
queryKey?: QueryKey
: Query Keysfilters?: QueryFilters
: Query Filters
Returns
This method does not return anything
queryClient.removeQueries
The removeQueries
method can be used to remove queries from the cache based on their query keys or any other functionally accessible property/state of the query.
queryClient.removeQueries(queryKey, { exact: true });
Options
queryKey?: QueryKey
: Query Keysfilters?: QueryFilters
: Query Filters
Returns
This method does not return anything
queryClient.resetQueries
The resetQueries
method can be used to reset queries in the cache to their
initial state based on their query keys or any other functionally accessible
property/state of the query.
This will notify subscribers — unlike clear
, which removes all
subscribers — and reset the query to its pre-loaded state — unlike
invalidateQueries
. If a query has initialData
, the query's data will be
reset to that. If a query is active, it will be refetched.
queryClient.resetQueries(queryKey, { exact: true });
Options
queryKey?: QueryKey
: Query Keysfilters?: QueryFilters
: Query FiltersrefetchPage: (page: TData, index: number, allPages: TData[]) => boolean
- Only for Infinite Queries
- Use this function to specify which pages should be refetched
resetOptions?: ResetOptions
:throwOnError?: boolean
- When set to
true
, this method will throw if any of the query refetch tasks fail.
- When set to
Returns
This method returns a promise that resolves when all active queries have been refetched.
queryClient.isFetching
This isFetching
method returns an integer
representing how many queries, if any, in the cache are currently fetching (including background-fetching, loading new pages, or loading more infinite query results)
if (queryClient.isFetching()) {
console.log("At least one query is fetching!");
}
React Query also exports a handy useIsFetching
hook that will let you subscribe to this state in your components without creating a manual subscription to the query cache.
Options
queryKey?: QueryKey
: Query Keysfilters?: QueryFilters
: Query Filters
Returns
This method returns the number of fetching queries.
queryClient.isMutating
This isMutating
method returns an integer
representing how many mutations, if any, in the cache are currently fetching.
if (queryClient.isMutating()) {
console.log("At least one mutation is fetching!");
}
React Query also exports a handy useIsMutating
hook that will let you subscribe to this state in your components without creating a manual subscription to the mutation cache.
Options
filters: MutationFilters
: Mutation Filters
Returns
This method returns the number of fetching mutations.
queryClient.getDefaultOptions
The getDefaultOptions
method returns the default options which have been set when creating the client or with setDefaultOptions
.
const defaultOptions = queryClient.getDefaultOptions();
queryClient.setDefaultOptions
The setDefaultOptions
method can be used to dynamically set the default options for this queryClient. Previously defined default options will be overwritten.
queryClient.setDefaultOptions({
queries: {
staleTime: Infinity,
},
});
queryClient.getQueryDefaults
The getQueryDefaults
method returns the default options which have been set for specific queries:
const defaultOptions = queryClient.getQueryDefaults("posts");
queryClient.setQueryDefaults
setQueryDefaults
can be used to set default options for specific queries:
queryClient.setQueryDefaults("posts", { queryFn: fetchPosts });
function Component() {
const { data } = useQuery("posts");
}
Options
queryKey: QueryKey
: Query Keysoptions: QueryOptions
queryClient.getMutationDefaults
The getMutationDefaults
method returns the default options which have been set for specific mutations:
const defaultOptions = queryClient.getMutationDefaults("addPost");
queryClient.setMutationDefaults
setMutationDefaults
can be used to set default options for specific mutations:
queryClient.setMutationDefaults("addPost", { mutationFn: addPost });
function Component() {
const { data } = useMutation("addPost");
}
Options
mutationKey: string | unknown[]
options: MutationOptions
queryClient.getQueryCache
The getQueryCache
method returns the query cache this client is connected to.
const queryCache = queryClient.getQueryCache();
queryClient.getMutationCache
The getMutationCache
method returns the mutation cache this client is connected to.
const mutationCache = queryClient.getMutationCache();
queryClient.clear
The clear
method clears all connected caches.
queryClient.clear();