id | title |
---|---|
overview |
Overview |
The @tanstack/svelte-query
package offers a 1st-class API for using TanStack Query via Svelte.
Include the QueryClientProvider near the root of your project:
<script lang="ts">
import { QueryClient, QueryClientProvider } from '@tanstack/svelte-query'
import Example from './lib/Example.svelte'
const queryClient = new QueryClient()
</script>
<QueryClientProvider client={queryClient}>
<Example />
</QueryClientProvider>
Then call any function (e.g. createQuery) from any component:
<script lang="ts">
import { createQuery } from '@tanstack/svelte-query'
const query = createQuery({
queryKey: ['todos'],
queryFn: () => fetchTodos(),
})
</script>
<div>
{#if $query.isLoading}
<p>Loading...</p>
{:else if $query.isError}
<p>Error: {$query.error.message}</p>
{:else if $query.isSuccess}
{#each $query.data as todo}
<p>{todo.title}</p>
{/each}
{/if}
</div>
If you are using SvelteKit, please have a look at SSR & SvelteKit.
Svelte Query offers useful functions and components that will make managing server state in Svelte apps easier.
createQuery
createQueries
createInfiniteQuery
createMutation
useQueryClient
useIsFetching
useIsMutating
useHydrate
<QueryClientProvider>
<Hydrate>
Svelte Query offers an API similar to React Query, but there are some key differences to be mindful of.
- Many of the functions in Svelte Query return a Svelte store. To access values on these stores reactively, you need to prefix the store with a
$
. You can learn more about Svelte stores here. - If your query or mutation depends on variables, you must assign it reactively. You can read more about this here.