sswr-patch
v1.0.0
Published
Svelte stale while revalidate (SWR) data fetching strategy
Downloads
3
Readme
Note: svelte
is a dependency, does not include postinstall script
SSWR (Svelte Stale While Revalidate)
Svelte stale while revalidate (SWR) data fetching strategy
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Features
- Installation
- Getting Started
- Configuration options
- Global configuration options
- Dependent fetching
- Re-validate on demand
- Mutate on demand
- Error handling
- Clear Cache
- Contributors
Introduction
Quote from vercel's SWR for react:
The name “SWR” is derived from stale-while-revalidate, a HTTP cache invalidation strategy popularized by HTTP RFC 5861. SWR is a strategy to first return the data from cache (stale), then send the fetch request (revalidate), and finally come with the up-to-date data.
With SWR, components will get a stream of data updates constantly and automatically. And the UI will be always fast and reactive.
Features
- :tada: Built for Svelte
- :fire: Extremly small and well packed at 2KB.
- :fire: No dependencies (one polyfill for EventTarget).
- :+1: Built-in cache and request deduplication.
- :eyes: Dependent fetching of data that depends on other.
- :eyes: Real time experience.
- :star: Typescript friendly.
- :+1: Error handling by using the error variable provided.
- :zap: Efficient DOM updates using Svelte reactivity.
- :zap: Efficient HTTP requests are only done when needed.
- :+1: Manual revalidation of the data by using
revalidate()
. - :+1: Optimistic UI / Manual mutation of the data by using
mutate()
. - :zzz: Window focus revalidation of the data.
- :zzz: Network change revalidation of the data.
- :+1: Initial data support for initial or offline data.
- :+1: Clear cache when you need to invalidate all data or the specified keys (eg. a user logout).
- :zzz: Offline support to be used without any revalidations with string keys.
- :+1: Global configuration available or per hook call.
Installation
You can use npm or yarn to install it.
npm i sswr
yarn add sswr
Getting Started
<script>
import { useSWR } from 'sswr'
// Call the `useSWR` and pass the key you want to use. It will be pased
// to the fetcher function. The fetcher function can be configured globally
// or passed as one of the options to this function.
const { data: posts } = useSWR('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts')
</script>
{#if posts}
{#each posts as post (post.id)}
<div>{post.title}</div>
{/each}
{/if}
This is a simple example that will use SWR as the strategy to fetch the data. In this particular case, all the default options are used (or the ones specified in the global config) and it will fetch the data using the default or global fetcher and update the DOM when the request is done.
Configuration options
All hook calls can have their respective configuration options applied to it. Nevertheless you can also configure global options to avoid passing them to each hook call.
Signature
function useSWR(key, options): SWRResponse
// Can be destructured to get the response as such:
const { data, error, mutate, revalidate } = useSWR(key, options)
Parameters
key
: A resolved or non-resolved key. Can either be a string, or a function. A function can be used for dependent fetching as seen below.options
: An optional object with optional properties such as:cache: SWRCache = new DefaultCache()
: Determines the cache to use for SWR.errors: EventTarget = new EventTarget()
: Determines the error event target where the errors will be dispatched.fetcher: (key) => Promise<any> = (url) => fetch(url).then((res) => res.json())
: Determines the fetcher function to use. This will be called to get the data.initialData: any = undefined
: Represents the initial data to use instead of undefined. Keep in mind the component will still attempt to re-validate unlessrevalidateOnMount
is set false.revalidateOnStart: boolean = true
: Determines if the hook should revalidate the key when it is called.dedupingInterval: number = 2000
: Determines the deduping interval. This interval represents the time SWR will avoid to perform a request if the last one was made beforededupingInterval
ago.revalidateOnFocus: boolean = true
: Revalidates the data when the window re-gains focus.focusThrottleInterval: number = 5000
: Interval throttle for the focus event. This will ignore focus re-validation if it happened last timefocusThrottleInterval
ago.revalidateOnReconnect: boolean = true
: Revalidates the data when a network connect change is detected (basically the browser / app comes back online).
Return Values
data: Writable<D | undefined>
: Stores the data of the HTTP response after the fetcher has proceesed it or undefined in case the HTTP request hasn't finished or there was an error.error: Writable<E | undefined>
: Determines error of the HTTP response in case it happened or undefined if there was no error or the HTTP request is not completed yet.mutate: (value, options) => void
: Mutate alias for the global mutate function without the need to append the key to it.revalidate: (options) => void
: Revalidation alias for the global revalidate function without the need to append the key to it.clear: (options) => void
: Clears the current key data from the cache.
Global configuration options
You can configure the options globally by creating a SWR instance and using it in your vue application as a plugin. This step is not mandatory but it's recommened for most apps.
Signature
function createSWR(options): { useSWR(); mutate(); revalidate(); clear() }
Parameters
options: SWROptions
: Parameters of the options that will be passed to all components. They are the same as the ones on each instance.
Return value
A set of functions to be used at any component.
Example
In any file place the following code and you can import the SWR functions directly in any component with the given configuration.
import { createSWR } from 'sswr'
const swr = createSWR({
// Configure a global fetcher for all SWR hooks. This
// can be replaced with anything that returns a promise
// with the data inside, for example: axios.
fetcher: (key) => fetch(key).then((res) => res.json()),
})
// Default instance exports.
export const useSWR = swr.useSWR
export const mutate = swr.mutate
export const revalidate = swr.revalidate
export const clear = swr.clear
Dependent fetching
<script>
import { useSWR } from 'sswr'
const { data: post } = useSWR('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/1')
// We need to pass a function as the key. Function will throw an error when post is undefined
// but we catch that and wait till it re-validates into a valid key to populate the user variable.
$: ({ data: user } = useSWR(() => `https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/users/${post.value.userId}`))
</script>
{#if post}
<div>{post.title}</div>
{/if}
{#if user}
<div>{user.name}</div>
{/if}
Re-validate on demand
Global revalidate function with given key
You can re-validate specific keys by importing the revalidate
function.
import { revalidate } from 'sswr'
You can call this method anywhere in your application by giving it the key, and the options.
Signature
function revalidate(key, options): void
Parameters
key
: Determines the key that is going to be re-validated. This must be a resolved key, meaning it must be a string or undefined. If undefined, the function will do nothing.options
: A partial object (meaning all props can be optional / undefined) that accepts the following options:force: boolean = false
:Determines if the re-validation should be forced. When a re-validation is forced, the dedupingInterval will be ignored and a fetch will be performed.
On specific hooks with keys
You can re-validate specific keys by grabing the revalidate
function of the useSWR
call.
This function will allow you to perform a re-validation of the data on demand. There's no need
to provide the key for this function since it's already bound to the hook key. It only accepts the options.
Signature
function revalidate(options): void
Parameters
options
: Same as global revalidate (check above).
Example
<script>
import { useSWR } from 'sswr'
const { data: post, revalidate } = useSWR('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/1')
</script>
{#if post}
<div>{post.title}</div>
<button on:click={() => revalidate()}>Revalidate</button>
{/if}
Mutate on demand
Global mutate function with given key
You can mutate specific keys by importing the mutate
function.
import { mutate } from 'sswr'
You can call this method anywhere in your application by giving it the key, the value and the options.
Signature
function mutate(key, value, options): void
Parameters
key
: Determines the key that is going to be mutated. This must be a resolved key, meaning it must be a string or undefined. If undefined, the function will do nothing.value: any | ((any) => any)
: Determines the new value to set. This can either be the value itself or a function that receives the current state and returns the new one.options
: A partial object (meaning all props can be optional / undefined) that accepts the following options:revalidate: boolean = true
: Determines if the mutation should attempt to revalidate the data afterwards.revalidateOptions: Partial<SWRRevalidateOptions> = { ...defaultRevalidateOptions }
: Determines the revalidation options passed to revalidate in case the parameterrevalidate
is set to true.
On specific hooks with keys
You can mutate specific keys by grabing the mutate
function of the useSWR
call.
This function will allow you to perform a mutation of the data on demand. There's no need
to provide the key for this function since it's already bound to the hook key. It only accepts the value and the options.
Signature
function mutate(value, options): void
Parameters
value
: Same as global mutate (check above).options
: Same as global mutate (check above).
Example
Keep in mind we set revalidate to false to avoid it performing a HTTP request for this example, since this would just over-write the static data with the server data again.
<script>
import { useSWR } from 'sswr'
const { data: post, mutate } = useSWR('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/1')
</script>
{#if post}
<div>{post.title}</div>
<button on:click={() => mutate((state) => ({ ...state, title: 'Sample' }), { revalidate: false })}>
Mutate only title
</button>
<button on:click={() => mutate({ title: 'Sample' }, { revalidate: false })}>
Leave only title
</button>
{/if}
Error handling
You can handle request errors by using the error
return value on a hook call. This will return the specific error that happened to the hook.
For example, a failed request.
Example
<script>
import { useSWR } from 'sswr'
const { data: posts, error } = useSWR('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts')
</script>
{#if error}
<div>There was an error</div>
{:else if posts}
{#each posts as post (post.id)}
<h1>{post.title}</h1>
{/each}
{/if}
Clear Cache
Global clear function with given keys
You can clear all the cached keys or the specified ones when you need to invalidate some keys.
To do this, you can use the clear
global function.
import { clear } from 'sswr'
Signature
function clear(keys, options): void
Parameters
keys
: A single key or a list with the keys to delete. If keys is undefined, all keys will be cleared from the cache.options
: A partial object containing one of the following options:broadcast: boolean
: Determines if the cache should broadcast the cache change to subscribed handlers. That means telling them the value now resolves to undefined.
On specific hooks with keys
You can clear specific keys by grabing the clear
function of the useSWR
call.
This function will allow you to clear the data on demand. There's no need
to provide the key for this function since it's already bound to the hook key. It only accepts the options.
Signature
function clear(options): void
Parameters
options
: Same as global clear (check above).
Example
<script>
import { useSWR } from 'sswr'
const { data: post, clear } = useSWR('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/1')
</script>
{#if post}
<div>{post.title}</div>
<button on:click={() => clear()}>
Clear cacheed data
</button>
{/if}