RTK Query Examples
Examples Overview
We have a variety of examples that demonstrate various aspects of using RTK Query.
These examples are not meant to be what you base your application on, but exist to show very specific behaviors that you may not actually want or need in your application. For most users, the basic examples in the Queries and Mutations sections will cover the majority of your needs.
Please note that when playing with the examples in CodeSandbox that you can experience quirky behavior, especially if you fork them and start editing files. Hot reloading, CSB service workers and msw
sometimes have trouble getting on the right page -- when that happens, just refresh in the CSB browser pane.
Kitchen Sink
React Optimistic Updates
In the example below you'll notice a few things. There are two Posts
list on the sidebar. The top one will only update after a successful mutation and resync with the server. The subscribed one will update immediately due to the optimistic update. In the event of an error, you'll see this get rolled back.
The example has some intentionally wonky behavior... when editing the name of a post, there is a decent chance you'll get a random error.
React with GraphQL
Authentication
There are several ways to handle authentication with RTK Query. This is a very basic example of taking a JWT from a login mutation, then setting that in our store. We then use prepareHeaders
to inject the authentication headers into every subsequent request.
Dispatching an action to set the user state
This example dispatches a setCredentials
action to store the user and token information.
Using extraReducers
This example uses a matcher from the endpoint and extraReducers
in the authSlice
.
React Class Components
Check out the PostDetail
component for an example of Class Component usage.