useCache()
function useCache(
fetchShape: ReadShape,
params: object | null,
): Denormalize<typeof fetchShape.schema> | null;
function useCache<Params extends Readonly<object>, S extends Schema>(
fetchShape: Pick<ReadShape<S, Params>, 'schema' | 'getFetchKey'>,
params: Params | null,
): Denormalize<S> | null;
Excellent to use data in the normalized cache without fetching.
- On Error (404, 500, etc):
- Returns previously cached if exists
- null otherwise
- While loading:
- Returns previously cached if exists
- null otherwise
Example
Using a type guard to deal with null
function Post({ id }: { id: number }) {
const post = useCache(PostResource.detailShape(), { id });
// post as PostResource | null
if (!post) return null;
// post as PostResource (typeguarded)
// ...render stuff here
}
Paginated data
When entities are stored in nested structures, that structure will remain.
export class PaginatedPostResource extends Resource {
readonly id: number | null = null;
readonly title: string = '';
readonly content: string = '';
static urlRoot = 'http://test.com/post/';
static listShape<T extends typeof Resource>(this: T) {
return {
...super.listShape(),
schema: { results: [this.asSchema()], nextPage: '', lastPage: '' },
};
}
}
function ArticleList({ page }: { page: string }) {
const { results: posts, nextPage, lastPage } = useCache(
PaginatedPostResource.listShape(),
{ page },
);
// posts as PaginatedPostResource[] | null
if (!posts) return null;
// posts as PaginatedPostResource[] (typeguarded)
// ...render stuff here
}
Useful FetchShape
s to send
Resource provides these built-in:
- detailShape()
- listShape()
Feel free to add your own FetchShape as well.