A query is a declarative dependency on an asynchronous source of data that is tied to a unique key. A query can be used with any Promise based method (including GET and POST methods) to fetch data from a server. If your method modifies data on the server, we recommend using Mutations instead.
To subscribe to a query in your components or custom hooks, call the useQuery
hook with at least:
import { useQuery } from '@tanstack/react-query'
function App() { const info = useQuery({ queryKey: ['todos'], queryFn: fetchTodoList })}
The unique key you provide is used internally for refetching, caching, and sharing your queries throughout your application.
The query result returned by useQuery
contains all of the information about the query that you'll need for templating and any other usage of the data:
const result = useQuery({ queryKey: ['todos'], queryFn: fetchTodoList })
The result
object contains a few very important states you'll need to be aware of to be productive. A query can only be in one of the following states at any given moment:
isPending
or status === 'pending'
- The query has no data yetisError
or status === 'error'
- The query encountered an errorisSuccess
or status === 'success'
- The query was successful and data is availableBeyond those primary states, more information is available depending on the state of the query:
error
- If the query is in an isError
state, the error is available via the error
property.data
- If the query is in an isSuccess
state, the data is available via the data
property.isFetching
- In any state, if the query is fetching at any time (including background refetching) isFetching
will be true
.For most queries, it's usually sufficient to check for the isPending
state, then the isError
state, then finally, assume that the data is available and render the successful state:
function Todos() { const { isPending, isError, data, error } = useQuery({ queryKey: ['todos'], queryFn: fetchTodoList, })
if (isPending) { return <span>Loading...</span> }
if (isError) { return <span>Error: {error.message}</span> }
// We can assume by this point that `isSuccess === true` return ( <ul> {data.map((todo) => ( <li key={todo.id}>{todo.title}</li> ))} </ul> )}
If booleans aren't your thing, you can always use the status
state as well:
function Todos() { const { status, data, error } = useQuery({ queryKey: ['todos'], queryFn: fetchTodoList, })
if (status === 'pending') { return <span>Loading...</span> }
if (status === 'error') { return <span>Error: {error.message}</span> }
// also status === 'success', but "else" logic works, too return ( <ul> {data.map((todo) => ( <li key={todo.id}>{todo.title}</li> ))} </ul> )}
TypeScript will also narrow the type of data
correctly if you've checked for pending
and error
before accessing it.
In addition to the status
field, you will also get an additional fetchStatus
property with the following options:
fetchStatus === 'fetching'
- The query is currently fetching.fetchStatus === 'paused'
- The query wanted to fetch, but it is paused. Read more about this in the Network Mode guide.fetchStatus === 'idle'
- The query is not doing anything at the moment.Background refetches and stale-while-revalidate logic make all combinations for status
and fetchStatus
possible. For example:
success
status will usually be in idle
fetchStatus, but it could also be in fetching
if a background refetch is happening.pending
status and fetching
fetchStatus, but it could also be paused
if there is no network connection.So keep in mind that a query can be in pending
state without actually fetching data. As a rule of thumb:
status
gives information about the data
: Do we have any or not?fetchStatus
gives information about the queryFn
: Is it running or not?For an alternative way of performing status checks, have a look at the Community Resources.
“This course is the best way to learn how to use React Query in real-world applications.”—Tanner LinsleyCheck it out