redaxios
react-query
redaxios | react-query | |
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12 | 190 | |
4,526 | 27,869 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.1 | |
9 months ago | almost 2 years ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript, JS | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
redaxios
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Counter-intuitive web devs mistakes
Once you start to handle all the corner-cases of the fetch, you will find that you don't want to repeat the boilerplate each time you call network, so you will write some wrapper around the fetch or use redaxios library from Jason Miller, which provides axios-like API on top of fetch so it weights only 800 bytes, which is nice. But then you might need the axios interceptors which redaxios do not implement and if your application upload files and you want to track the upload progress with ProgressEvent, the fetch does not support that, only XMLHttpRequest does, on which the original axios is based. And after you write all your custom wrappers around fetch and upload wrappers around XMLHttpRequest, you might reconcider the original statement, that axios library is obsoleted.
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Safe Data Fetching in Modern JavaScript
If you love Axios, but donât love that itâll add 11kb to your bundle, Redaxios is a great alternative, that uses the same API as Axios, but in less than 1kb.
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You might be using `fetch` wrong...
Axios is another great, and very popular, solution for clean data fetching. It is a bit larger (10kb gzip vs 2kb gzip), so if kb size is important to you (I would argue it typically should be) redaxios is a great option too
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If you know, you know
Then you get redaxios.
- Axios vs Fetch?
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Modern API data-fetching methods in React
There's a neat library called https://github.com/developit/redaxios that implements almost all the Axios API, but as a wrapper around fetch instead.
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can't set httponly cookie in nestjs
As for your very last comment, for those who canât part from axiosâ API, try redaxios which is just a super thin wrapper around fetch().
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How do you go about architecturing large React application?
If you want use fetch but with Axios API, small size(~1KB), I suggest you checkout redaxios from Preact creator.
- [AskJS] dame - 23 KB axios alternative with zero dependencies. What do you think?
- What are some React life pro tips?
react-query
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20 Essential Parts Of Any Large Scale React App
react-query
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Some Very Cool (Underrated maybe) React Libraries
React Query: This library makes it easy to manage data in your React applications, from fetching to caching and updating data. It offers a simple, powerful, and flexible API for handling data and keeping your UI in sync with your data. https://github.com/tannerlinsley/react-query
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Do I need a fetching library in React?
useQuery (react-query) (+) all from above (+) even more features (-) more complex, even the examples are complex, has more aggressive defaults (re-fetching every 2s)
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Is there any redux-saga equivalent for zustand?
see here Overview
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React Query Codegen from OpenAPI
Rapini is a new tool that can generate custom React Query hooks using OpenAPI (Swagger) files.
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React hooks for 28 RxJS operators
React Query is the gold standard for using async data declaratively with hooks. I ended up needing to modify even my simple useTimer hook to work more like useQuery to take multiple keys in order to work as an inner observable for other operators.
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Goodbye, useEffect - Reactathon 2022
For most situations, I would recommend using a library like React Query. It handles a lot of common data-fetching boiler plate and already accounts for this useEffect() issue. Also, it supports Suspense if you want to use that.
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Managing application cache with react-query, and code generation.
At this point, I want to move on to the react-query cache management library. Give a brief overview and see how you can improve your developer experience with cache using this library.
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When to use a hook, and when to use a service?
There isn't the "service" concept in React. If you need to send off data you can just do so with fetch. If you need to load data and cache it so it can be used across components and unmounts, then something like react-query is what I'd recommend. But it's basically a combination of React Context, useEffect, and useState to manage the cache and lifecycle of a request.
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What would you consider to be a must for a modern 2022 dev stack?
react-query is pretty neat too. I default to that for most projects unless it's something unusual
What are some alternatives?
axios - Promise based HTTP client for the browser and node.js
SWR - React Hooks for Data Fetching
react-helmet - A document head manager for React
documentation - đ° Architectural design methodology for Frontend projects
redux-saga - An alternative side effect model for Redux apps
twilio-video-app-react - A collaboration application built with the twilio-video.js SDK and React.js
rtk-query - Data fetching and caching addon for Redux Toolkit
fetch - A Fetch API wrapper
zustand - đ» Bear necessities for state management in React
create-react-app - Set up a modern web app by running one command.
Recoil - Recoil is an experimental state management library for React apps. It provides several capabilities that are difficult to achieve with React alone, while being compatible with the newest features of React.