<Await>
Used to render deferred values with automatic error handling. Make sure to review the Deferred Data Guide since there are a few APIs that work together with this component.
import { Await, useLoaderData } from "react-router-dom";
function Book() {
const { book, reviews } = useLoaderData();
return (
<div>
<h1>{book.title}</h1>
<p>{book.description}</p>
<React.Suspense fallback={<ReviewsSkeleton />}>
<Await
resolve={reviews}
errorElement={
<div>Could not load reviews 😬</div>
}
children={(resolvedReviews) => (
<Reviews items={resolvedReviews} />
)}
/>
</React.Suspense>
</div>
);
}
Note: <Await>
expects to be rendered inside of a <React.Suspense>
or <React.SuspenseList>
parent to enable the fallback UI.
declare function Await(
props: AwaitProps
): React.ReactElement;
interface AwaitProps {
children: React.ReactNode | AwaitResolveRenderFunction;
errorElement?: React.ReactNode;
resolve: TrackedPromise | any;
}
interface AwaitResolveRenderFunction {
(data: Awaited<any>): React.ReactElement;
}
children
Can either be React elements or a function.
When using a function, the value is provided as the only parameter.
<Await resolve={reviewsPromise}>
{(resolvedReviews) => <Reviews items={resolvedReviews} />}
</Await>
When using React elements, useAsyncValue
will provide the data:
<Await resolve={reviewsPromise}>
<Reviews />
</Await>;
function Reviews() {
const resolvedReviews = useAsyncValue();
return <div>{/* ... */}</div>;
}
errorElement
The error element renders instead of the children when the promise rejects. You can access the error with useAsyncError
.
If the promise rejects, you can provide an optional errorElement
to handle that error in a contextual UI via the useAsyncError
hook.
<Await
resolve={reviewsPromise}
errorElement={<ReviewsError />}
>
<Reviews />
</Await>;
function ReviewsError() {
const error = useAsyncError();
return <div>{error.message}</div>;
}
If you do not provide an errorElement, the rejected value will bubble up to the nearest route-level errorElement
and be accessible via the useRouteError
hook.
resolve
Takes a promise returned from a deferred loader value to be resolved and rendered.
import {
defer,
Route,
useLoaderData,
Await,
} from "react-router-dom";
// given this route
<Route
loader={async () => {
let book = await getBook();
let reviews = getReviews(); // not awaited
return defer({
book,
reviews, // this is a promise
});
}}
element={<Book />}
/>;
function Book() {
const {
book,
reviews, // this is the same promise
} = useLoaderData();
return (
<div>
<h1>{book.title}</h1>
<p>{book.description}</p>
<React.Suspense fallback={<ReviewsSkeleton />}>
<Await
// and is the promise we pass to Await
resolve={reviews}
>
<Reviews />
</Await>
</React.Suspense>
</div>
);
}