"Parallel" queries are queries that are executed in parallel, or at the same time so as to maximize fetching concurrency.
When the number of parallel queries does not change, there is no extra effort to use parallel queries. Just use any number of TanStack Query's useQuery
and useInfiniteQuery
hooks side-by-side!
function App () { // The following queries will execute in parallel const usersQuery = useQuery({ queryKey: ['users'], queryFn: fetchUsers }) const teamsQuery = useQuery({ queryKey: ['teams'], queryFn: fetchTeams }) const projectsQuery = useQuery({ queryKey: ['projects'], queryFn: fetchProjects }) ...}
When using React Query in suspense mode, this pattern of parallelism does not work, since the first query would throw a promise internally and would suspend the component before the other queries run. To get around this, you'll either need to use the
useQueries
hook (which is suggested) or orchestrate your own parallelism with separate components for eachuseQuery
instance (which is lame).
useQueries
If the number of queries you need to execute is changing from render to render, you cannot use manual querying since that would violate the rules of hooks. Instead, TanStack Query provides a useQueries
hook, which you can use to dynamically execute as many queries in parallel as you'd like.
useQueries
accepts an options object with a queries key whose value is an array of query objects. It returns an array of query results:
function App({ users }) { const userQueries = useQueries({ queries: users.map((user) => { return { queryKey: ['user', user.id], queryFn: () => fetchUserById(user.id), } }), })}
“This course is the best way to learn how to use React Query in real-world applications.”—Tanner LinsleyCheck it out