Rendering paginated data is a very common UI pattern and in TanStack Query, it "just works" by including the page information in the query key:
const result = useQuery({ queryKey: ['projects', page], queryFn: fetchProjects,})
However, if you run this simple example, you might notice something strange:
The UI jumps in and out of the success
and pending
states because each new page is treated like a brand new query.
This experience is not optimal and unfortunately is how many tools today insist on working. But not TanStack Query! As you may have guessed, TanStack Query comes with an awesome feature called placeholderData
that allows us to get around this.
placeholderData
Consider the following example where we would ideally want to increment a pageIndex (or cursor) for a query. If we were to use useQuery
, it would still technically work fine, but the UI would jump in and out of the success
and pending
states as different queries are created and destroyed for each page or cursor. By setting placeholderData
to (previousData) => previousData
or keepPreviousData
function exported from TanStack Query, we get a few new things:
data
is seamlessly swapped to show the new data.isPlaceholderData
is made available to know what data the query is currently providing youimport { keepPreviousData, useQuery } from '@tanstack/react-query'import React from 'react'
function Todos() { const [page, setPage] = React.useState(0)
const fetchProjects = (page = 0) => fetch('/api/projects?page=' + page).then((res) => res.json())
const { isPending, isError, error, data, isFetching, isPlaceholderData } = useQuery({ queryKey: ['projects', page], queryFn: () => fetchProjects(page), placeholderData: keepPreviousData, })
return ( <div> {isPending ? ( <div>Loading...</div> ) : isError ? ( <div>Error: {error.message}</div> ) : ( <div> {data.projects.map((project) => ( <p key={project.id}>{project.name}</p> ))} </div> )} <span>Current Page: {page + 1}</span> <button onClick={() => setPage((old) => Math.max(old - 1, 0))} disabled={page === 0} > Previous Page </button> <button onClick={() => { if (!isPlaceholderData && data.hasMore) { setPage((old) => old + 1) } }} // Disable the Next Page button until we know a next page is available disabled={isPlaceholderData || !data?.hasMore} > Next Page </button> {isFetching ? <span> Loading...</span> : null} </div> )}
placeholderData
While not as common, the placeholderData
option also works flawlessly with the useInfiniteQuery
hook, so you can seamlessly allow your users to continue to see cached data while infinite query keys change over time.
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