Book Image

State Management with React Query

By : Daniel Afonso
Book Image

State Management with React Query

By: Daniel Afonso

Overview of this book

State management, a crucial aspect of the React ecosystem, has gained significant attention in recent times. While React offers various libraries and tools to handle state, each with different approaches and perspectives, one thing is clear: state management solutions for handling client state are not optimized for dealing with server state. React Query was created to address this issue of managing your server state, and this guide will equip you with the knowledge and skills needed to effectively use React Query for state management. Starting with a brief history of state management in the React ecosystem, you’ll find out what prompted the split from a global state to client and server state and thus understand the need for React Query. As you progress through the chapters, you'll see how React Query enables you to perform server state tasks such as fetching, caching, updating, and synchronizing your data with the server. But that’s not all; once you’ve mastered React Query, you’ll be able to apply this knowledge to handle server state with server-side rendering frameworks as well. You’ll also work with patterns to test your code by leveraging the testing library and Mock Service Worker. By the end of this book, you'll have gained a new perspective of state and be able to leverage React Query to overcome the obstacles associated with server state.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
1
Part 1: Understanding State and Getting to Know React Query
5
Part 2: Managing Server State with React Query

Summary

This chapter taught us how React Query can complement our server-side-rendered applications.

You learned how React Query enables you to prefetch data on the server and send it to React Query on the client side. To do this, you got to know two patterns, initialData and hydrate. In the initialData pattern, you prefetch the data on the server and pass it to the initialData option in the useQuery hook on the client side. In the hydrate pattern, you prefetch your query on the server, dehydrate the query cache, and hydrate it on the client side.

In Chapter 8, Testing React Query Hooks and Components, we will focus on one of the things that will help you sleep better at night: testing. You will get to know how you can test your component, that is, using React Query, as well as some custom hooks for improving your developer experience.