useFetchers
Returns an array of all inflight fetchers without their load
, submit
, or Form
properties (can't have parent components trying to control the behavior of their children! We know from IRL experience that this is a fool's errand.)
import { useFetchers } from "react-router-dom";
function SomeComp() {
const fetchers = useFetchers();
// array of inflight fetchers
}
This is useful for components throughout the app that didn't create the fetchers but want to use their submissions to participate in optimistic UI.
For example, imagine a UI where the sidebar lists projects, and the main view displays a list of checkboxes for the current project. The sidebar could display the number of completed and total tasks for each project.
+-----------------+----------------------------+
| | |
| Soccer (8/9) | [x] Do the dishes |
| | |
| > Home (2/4) | [x] Fold laundry |
| | |
| | [ ] Replace battery in the |
| | smoke alarm |
| | |
| | [ ] Change lights in kids |
| | bathroom |
| | |
+-----------------+----------------------------β
When the user clicks a checkbox, the submission goes to the action to change the state of the task. Instead of creating a "loading state" we want to create an "optimistic UI" that will immediately update the checkbox to appear checked even though the server hasn't processed it yet. In the checkbox component, we can use fetcher.submission
:
function Task({ task }) {
const { projectId, id } = task;
const toggle = useFetcher();
const checked = toggle.formData
? toggle.formData.get("complete") === "on"
: task.complete;
return (
<toggle.Form
method="put"
action={`/projects/${projectId}/tasks/${id}`}
>
<input name="id" type="hidden" defaultValue={id} />
<label>
<input
name="complete"
type="checkbox"
checked={checked}
onChange={(e) => toggle.submit(e.target.form)}
/>
</label>
</toggle.Form>
);
}
This awesome for the checkbox, but the sidebar will say 2/4 while the checkboxes show 3/4 when the user clicks on of them!
+-----------------+----------------------------+
| | |
| Soccer (8/9) | [x] Do the dishes |
| | |
| > Home (2/4) | [x] Fold laundry |
| WRONG! ^ | |
| CLICK!-->[x] Replace battery in the |
| | smoke alarm |
| | |
| | [ ] Change lights in kids |
| | bathroom |
| | |
+-----------------+----------------------------β
Because routes are automatically revalidated, the sidebar will quickly update and be correct. But for a moment, it's gonna feel a little funny.
This is where useFetchers
comes in. Up in the sidebar, we can access all the inflight fetcher states from the checkboxes - even though it's not the component that created them.
The strategy has three steps:
fetcher.formData
to immediately update the countfunction ProjectTaskCount({ project }) {
let completedTasks = 0;
const fetchers = useFetchers();
// Find this project's fetchers
const relevantFetchers = fetchers.filter((fetcher) => {
return fetcher.formAction?.startsWith(
`/projects/${project.id}/tasks/`
);
});
// Store in a map for easy lookup
const myFetchers = new Map(
relevantFetchers.map(({ formData }) => [
formData.get("id"),
formData.get("complete") === "on",
])
);
// Increment the count
for (const task of project.tasks) {
if (myFetchers.has(task.id)) {
if (myFetchers.get(task.id)) {
// if it's being submitted, increment optimistically
completedTasks++;
}
} else if (task.complete) {
// otherwise use the real task's data
completedTasks++;
}
}
return (
<small>
{completedTasks}/{project.tasks.length}
</small>
);
}
It's a little bit of work, but it's mostly just asking React Router for the state it's tracking and doing an optimistic calculation based on it.