#react query

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React Query is a lightweight, fast, and feature-rich React library for fetching, caching, and updating asynchronous data in React applications. It provides a simple, yet powerful API for fetching, caching, and updating data from external sources such as APIs, databases, etc. It is designed to be highly performant, efficient, and flexible, making it an ideal choice for building modern React applications.
Rethinking Server State with React Query
React Summit 2020React Summit 2020
96 min
Rethinking Server State with React Query
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Featured Workshop
Tanner Linsley
Tanner Linsley
The distinction between server state and client state in our applications might be a new concept for some, but it is very important to understand when delivering a top-notch user experience. Server state comes with unique problems that often sneak into our applications surprise like:
- Sharing Data across apps- Caching & Persistence- Deduping Requests- Background Updates- Managing “Stale” Data- Pagination & Incremental fetching- Memory & Garbage Collection- Optimistic Updates
Traditional “Global State” managers pretend these challenges don’t exist and this ultimately results in developers building their own on-the-fly attempts to mitigate them.
In this workshop, we will build an application that exposes these issues, allows us to understand them better, and finally turn them from challenges into features using a library designed for managing server-state called React Query.
By the end of the workshop, you will have a better understanding of server state, client state, syncing asynchronous data (mouthful, I know), and React Query.
Fetch, useEffect, React Query, SWR, what else?
React Advanced 2023React Advanced 2023
102 min
Fetch, useEffect, React Query, SWR, what else?
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WorkshopFree
Ondrej Polesny
Ondrej Polesny
In this workshop, first, we’ll go over the different ways you can consume APIs in React. Then, we’ll test each one by fetching content from a headless CMS (with both REST and GraphQL) and checking in detail how they work.
While there is no advanced React knowledge required, this is going to be a hands-on session, so you’ll need to clone a preconfigured GitHub repository and utilize your preferred React programming editor, like VS Code.
You will learn:- What diverse data fetching options there are in React- What are advantages and disadvantages of each- What are the typical use cases and when each strategy is more beneficial than others