useInfiniteList
The useInfiniteList
hook is an extended version of TanStack Query's useInfiniteQuery
used for retrieving items from a resource
with pagination, sort, and filter configurations. It is ideal for lists where the total number of records is unknown and the user loads the next pages with a button.
It uses the
getList
method as the query function from thedataProvider
which is passed to<Refine>
.It uses a query key to cache the data. The query key is generated from the provided properties. You can see the query key by using the TanStack Query devtools.
Usage
Here is a basic example of how to use the useInfiniteList
hook.
Pagination
The useInfiniteList
hook supports pagination properties just like useList
. To handle pagination, the useInfiniteList
hook passes the pagination
property to the getList
method from the dataProvider
.
Dynamically changing the pagination
properties will trigger a new request. The fetchNextPage
method will increase the pagination.current
property by one and trigger a new request as well.
Retrieving the Total Row Count
When the getList
method is called via useInfiniteList
, it should ideally return the total count of rows (rowCount
). The way this count is obtained depends on the data provider in use:
- REST Providers: Commonly obtain the total count from the
x-total-count
header. - GraphQL Providers: Often source the count from specific data fields like
pageInfo.total
. - Other Providers: Follow their own practices for obtaining the total count.
If the data provider doesn't return a specific count, the getList
method may fall back to using the length of the paginated data array as the rowCount
.
For more information on how this works, refer to the getList
method documentation.
import { useInfiniteList } from "@refinedev/core";
const postListQueryResult = useInfiniteList({
resource: "posts",
pagination: { current: 3, pageSize: 8 },
});
Sorting
The useInfiniteList
hook supports the sorting feature, which you can enable by passing the sorters
property. useInfiniteList
will then pass this property to the getList
method from the dataProvider
.
Dynamically changing the sorters
property will trigger a new request.
Filtering
The useInfiniteList
hook supports the filtering feature, which you can enable by passing the filters
property. useInfiniteList
will then pass this property to the getList
method from the dataProvider
.
Dynamically changing the filters
property will trigger a new request.
Realtime Updates
This feature is only available if you use a Live Provider.
When the useInfiniteList
hook is mounted, it will call the subscribe
method from the liveProvider
with some parameters such as channel
, resource
etc. This is useful when you want to subscribe to live updates.
Properties
resource required
This parameter will be passed to the getList
method from the dataProvider
as a parameter. It is usually used as an API endpoint path but it all depends on how you handle the resource
in the getList
method.
useInfiniteList({
resource: "categories",
});
For more information, refer to the creating a data provider tutorial →
If you have multiple resources with the same name, you can pass the identifier
instead of the name
of the resource. It will only be used as the main matching key for the resource, data provider methods will still work with the name
of the resource defined in the <Refine/>
component.
For more information, refer to the
identifier
of the<Refine/>
component documentation →
dataProviderName
This prop allows you to specify which dataProvider
if you have more than one. Just pass it like in the example:
useInfiniteList({
dataProviderName: "second-data-provider",
});
filters
filters
will be passed to the getList
method from the dataProvider
as a parameter. It is used to send filter query parameters to the API.
useInfiniteList({
filters: [
{
field: "title",
operator: "contains",
value: "Foo",
},
],
});
For more information, refer to the
CrudFilters
interface →
sorters
sorters
will be passed to the getList
method from the dataProvider
as a parameter. It is used to send sort query parameters to the API.
useInfiniteList({
sorters: [
{
field: "title",
order: "asc",
},
],
});
For more information, refer to the
CrudSorting
interface →
pagination
pagination
will be passed to the getList
method from the dataProvider
as a parameter. It is used to send pagination query parameters to the API.
current
You can pass the current
page number to the pagination
property.
useInfiniteList({
pagination: {
current: 2,
},
});
pageSize
You can pass the pageSize
to the pagination
property.
useInfiniteList({
pagination: {
pageSize: 20,
},
});
mode
This property can be "off"
, "client"
or "server"
. It is used to determine whether to use server-side pagination or not.
useInfiniteList({
pagination: {
mode: "off",
},
});
queryOptions
queryOptions
is used to pass additional options to the useQuery
hook. It is useful when you want to pass additional options to the useQuery
hook.
useInfiniteList({
queryOptions: {
retry: 3,
},
});
For more information, refer to the
useQuery
documentation→
meta
meta
is a special property that can be used to pass additional information to data provider methods for the following purposes:
- Customizing the data provider methods for specific use cases.
- Generating GraphQL queries using plain JavaScript Objects (JSON).
In the following example, we pass the headers
property in the meta
object to the create
method. With similar logic, you can pass any properties to specifically handle the data provider methods.
useInfiniteList({
meta: {
headers: { "x-meta-data": "true" },
},
});
const myDataProvider = {
//...
getList: async ({
resource,
pagination,
sorters,
filters,
meta,
}) => {
const headers = meta?.headers ?? {};
const url = `${apiUrl}/${resource}`;
//...
const { data } = await httpClient.get(`${url}`, { headers });
return {
data,
};
},
//...
};
For more information, refer to the
meta
section of the General Concepts documentation→
successNotification
NotificationProvider
is required for this prop to work.
After data is fetched successfully, useInfiniteList
can call open
function from NotificationProvider
to show a success notification. With this prop, you can customize the success notification.
useInfiniteList({
successNotification: (data, values, resource) => {
return {
message: `${data.title} Successfully fetched.`,
description: "Success with no errors",
type: "success",
};
},
});
errorNotification
NotificationProvider
is required for this prop to work.
After data fetching is failed, useInfiniteList
will call the open
function from NotificationProvider
to show an error notification. With this prop, you can customize the error notification.
useInfiniteList({
errorNotification: (data, values, resource) => {
return {
message: `Something went wrong when getting ${data.id}`,
description: "Error",
type: "error",
};
},
});
liveMode
LiveProvider
is required for this prop to work.
Determines whether to update data automatically ("auto") or not ("manual") if a related live event is received. It can be used to update and show data in Realtime throughout your app.
useInfiniteList({
liveMode: "auto",
});
onLiveEvent
LiveProvider
is required for this prop to work.
The callback function is executed when new events from a subscription have arrived.
useInfiniteList({
onLiveEvent: (event) => {
console.log(event);
},
});
liveParams
LiveProvider
is required for this prop to work.
Params to pass to liveProvider's subscribe method.
overtimeOptions
If you want loading overtime for the request, you can pass the overtimeOptions
prop to the this hook. It is useful when you want to show a loading indicator when the request takes too long.
interval
is the time interval in milliseconds. onInterval
is the function that will be called on each interval.
Return overtime
object from this hook. elapsedTime
is the elapsed time in milliseconds. It becomes undefined
when the request is completed.
const { overtime } = useInfiniteList({
//...
overtimeOptions: {
interval: 1000,
onInterval(elapsedInterval) {
console.log(elapsedInterval);
},
},
});
console.log(overtime.elapsedTime); // undefined, 1000, 2000, 3000 4000, ...
// You can use it like this:
{
elapsedTime >= 4000 && <div>this takes a bit longer than expected</div>;
}
config deprecated
Use pagination
, hasPagination
, sorters
and filters
instead.
hasPagination deprecated
Use pagination.mode
instead.
Return Values
Returns an object with TanStack Query's useInfiniteQuery
return values.
For more information, refer to the
useInfiniteQuery
documentation→
Additional Values
overtime
overtime
object is returned from this hook. elapsedTime
is the elapsed time in milliseconds. It becomes undefined
when the request is completed.
const { overtime } = useInfiniteList();
console.log(overtime.elapsedTime); // undefined, 1000, 2000, 3000 4000, ...
FAQ
How to use cursor-based pagination?
Some APIs use the cursor-pagination
method for its benefits. This method uses a cursor
object to determine the next set of data. The cursor can be a number or a string and is passed to the API as a query parameter.
Preparing the data provider:
Consumes data from data provider useInfiniteList
with the getList
method. First of all, we need to make this method in the data provider convenient for this API. The cursor
data is kept in pagination
and should be set to 0
by default.
getList: async ({ resource, pagination }) => {
const { current } = pagination;
const { data } = await axios.get(
`https://api.fake-rest.refine.dev/${resource}?cursor=${current || 0}`,
);
return {
data: data[resource],
total: 0,
};
},
As the total
data is only needed in the offset-pagination
method, define it as 0
here.
After this process, we successfully retrieved the first page of data. Let's fill the cursor
object for the next page.
getList: async ({ resource, pagination }) => {
const { current } = pagination;
const { data } = await axios.get(
`https://api.fake-rest.refine.dev/${resource}?cursor=${current || 0}`,
);
return {
data: data[resource],
total: 0,
cursor: {
next: data.cursor.next,
prev: data.cursor.prev,
},
};
},
How to override the getNextPageParam
method?
By default, Refine
expects you to return the cursor
object, but is not required. This is because some APIs don't work that way. To fix this problem you need to override the getNextPageParam
method and return the next cursor
.
import { useInfiniteList } from "@refinedev/core";
const {
data,
error,
hasNextPage,
isLoading,
fetchNextPage,
isFetchingNextPage,
} = useInfiniteList({
resource: "posts",
queryOptions: {
// When you override this method, you can access the `lastPage` and `allPages`.
getNextPageParam: (lastPage, allPages) => {
// return the last post's id
const { data } = lastPage;
const lastPost = data[data.length - 1];
return lastPost.id;
},
},
});
API Reference
Properties
Type Parameters
Property | Description | Type | Default |
---|---|---|---|
TQueryFnData | Result data returned by the query function. Extends BaseRecord | BaseRecord | BaseRecord |
TError | Custom error object that extends HttpError | HttpError | HttpError |
TData | Result data returned by the select function. Extends BaseRecord . If not specified, the value of TQueryFnData will be used as the default value. | BaseRecord | TQueryFnData |
Return Values
Description | Type |
---|---|
Result of the TanStack Query's useInfiniteQuery | InfiniteQueryObserverResult<{ data: TData[]; total: number; }, TError> |
overtime | { elapsedTime?: number } |
Example
npm create refine-app@latest -- --example use-infinite-list
- Usage
- Pagination
- Retrieving the Total Row Count
- Sorting
- Filtering
- Realtime Updates
- Properties
- resource
- dataProviderName
- filters
- sorters
- pagination
- current
- pageSize
- mode
- queryOptions
- meta
- successNotification
- errorNotification
- liveMode
- onLiveEvent
- liveParams
- overtimeOptions
confighasPagination- Return Values
- Additional Values
- overtime
- FAQ
- How to use cursor-based pagination?
- How to override the
getNextPageParam
method? - API Reference
- Properties
- Type Parameters
- Return Values
- Example