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Version: v1.6.1

Pagination Container

Pagination Container is also a higher-order component, similar to a Fragment Container, that is designed to simplify the workflow of loading more items in a list — in many cases, we don't want to fetch all the data at once but lazily load more data. It relies on a GraphQL server exposing connections in a standardized way. For a detailed spec, please check out this page.

Table of Contents:

@connection

Pagination Container works in a very similar way to the Fragment Container in that you also specify the data requirements for a component via GraphQL fragments in the fragmentSpec.

However, when specifying connection fragments for a Pagination Container, it is expected that at least one of the fragments contains a GraphQL connection to paginate over, and that that the connection field is annotated with a @connection directive.

The purpose of the @connection directive is to allow Relay to uniquely identify different connections under a parent type. The @connection directive takes 2 arguments that help identify the connection:

@connection(key: String!, filters: [String])

  • key: Required String that serves as a unique identifier for the connection under the parent field type. A good practice could be <ComponentName>_<fieldName | fieldAlias>.
  • filters: Optional Array of strings that belong to the set of argument variables defined for the connection field (e.g. orderBy, searchTerm, etc). The values for the variables specified in this array will be used alongside the user-supplied key to uniquely identify a connection. If filters is not provided, by default Relay will use the set of all of the arguments the connection field takes, excluding pagination specific arguments (i.e. first/last, after/before).

Examples

Specifying just the key:

fragment Feed_user on User {
# This connection, under a specific User, will be uniquely identified by
# the key "Feed_feed" and the value of `$orderBy` (given that no `filters` were provided)
feed(
first: $count
after: $cursor
orderby: $orderBy
) @connection(key: "Feed_feed") {
edges {
node {
id,
...Story_story
}
}
}

Specifying key and filters:

fragment Feed_user on User {
# This connection, under a specific User, will be uniquely identified by
# the key "Feed_feed" and /only/ the value of `$searchTerm`, i.e.
# different values of `orderBy` will not distinguish connections.
feed(
first: $count
after: $cursor
orderby: $orderBy
search_term: $searchTerm
) @connection(key: "Feed_feed", filters: ['searchTerm']) {
edges {
node {
id,
...Story_story
}
}
}

createPaginationContainer

createPaginationContainer has the following signature:

createPaginationContainer(
component: ReactComponentClass,
fragmentSpec: GraphQLTaggedNode | {[string]: GraphQLTaggedNode},
connectionConfig: ConnectionConfig,
): ReactComponentClass;

type ConnectionConfig = {
direction?: 'backward' | 'forward',
getConnectionFromProps?: (props: Object) => ?ConnectionData,
getFragmentVariables?: (previousVariables: Object, totalCount: number) => Object,
getVariables: (
props: Object,
paginationInfo: {count: number, cursor: ?string},
fragmentVariables: Object,
) => Object,
query: GraphQLTaggedNode,
};

type ConnectionData = {
edges?: ?Array<any>,
pageInfo?: ?{
endCursor: ?string,
hasNextPage: boolean,
hasPreviousPage: boolean,
startCursor: ?string,
},
};

Arguments

  • component: The React Component class of the component requiring the fragment data.
  • fragmentSpec: Specifies the data requirements for the Component via a GraphQL fragment. It is expected that one of the fragments specified here will contain a @connection for pagination. The required data will be available on the component as props that match the shape of the provided fragment. fragmentSpec can be one of 2 things:
    • A graphql tagged fragment. If the fragment uses the name convention <FileName><...>_<propName>, the fragment's data will be available to the Component as a prop with the given <propName>. If the fragment name doesn't specify a prop name, the data will be available as a data prop.
    • An object whose keys are prop names and values are graphql tagged fragments. Each key specified in this object will correspond to a prop available to the resulting Component.
    • Note: To enable compatibility mode, relay-compiler enforces fragments to be named as <FileName>_<propName>.
  • connectionConfig:
    • direction: Either "forward" to indicate forward pagination using after/first, or "backward" to indicate backwards pagination using before/last. If not provided, Relay will infer the direction based on the provided @connection directive. Note: direction is not optional in compatibility mode.
    • getConnectionFromProps: Function that should indicate which connection to paginate over, given the fragment props (i.e. the props corresponding to the fragmentSpec). This is necessary in most cases because the Relay can't automatically tell which connection you mean to paginate over (a container might fetch multiple fragments and connections, but can only paginate one of them). If not provided, Relay will try infer the correct connection to paginate over based on the provided @connection directive. See our example for more details. Note: getConnectionFromProps is not optional in compatibility mode.
    • getFragmentVariables: Function that should return the bag of variables to use for reading out the data from the store when re-rendering the component. This function takes the previous set of variables passed to the pagination query, and the number of elements that have been fetched in total so far. Specifically, this indicates which variables to use when reading out the data from the local data store after the new pagination query has been fetched. If not specified, Relay will default to using all of the previous variables and using the total count for the count variable. This option is analogous to renderVariables in the Refetch Container. See our example for more details.
    • getVariables: Function that should return the variables to pass to the pagination query when fetching it from the server, given the current props, count and cursor. You may set whatever variables here, as well as modify the defaults to use for after/first/before/last arguments. See our example for more details.
    • query: A graphql tagged query to be used as the pagination query to fetch more data upon calling loadMore.

Available Props

The Component resulting from createPaginationContainer will receive the following props:

type Props = {
relay: {
environment: Environment,
hasMore(), // See #hasMore section
isLoading(), // See #isLoading section
loadMore(), // See #loadMore section
refetchConnection(), // See #refetchConnection section
},
// Additional props as specified by the fragmentSpec
}
  • relay:
    • environment: The current Relay Environment
    • hasMore: See hasMore docs
    • isLoading: See isLoading docs
    • loadMore: See loadMore docs
    • refetchConnection : See refetchConnection docs

hasMore()

hasMore is a function available on the relay prop. This function indicates wether there are more pages to fetch from the server or not.

hasMore: () => boolean,

isLoading

isLoading is a function available on the relay prop. This function indicates if a previous call to loadMore() is still pending. This is convenient for avoiding duplicate load calls.

isLoading: () => boolean,

loadMore

loadMore is a function available on the relay prop. You can call loadMore() to fetch more items from the server based on the connectionConfig provided to the container. This will return null if there are no more items to fetch, otherwise it will fetch more items and return a Disposable that can be used to cancel the fetch.

loadMore(pageSize: number, callback: ?(error: ?Error) => void): ?Disposable

Arguments:

  • pageSize: The number of additional items to fetch (not the total).
  • callback: Function called when the new page has been fetched. If an error occurred during refetch, this function will receive that error as an argument.

refetchConnection

refetchConnection is a function available on the relay prop. You can call refetchConnection to restart pagination on a connection from scratch, with optionally a completely new set of variables to pass to the pagination query. This is useful for example if you are paginating over a collection based on a userID and the userID changes, you'd want to start paginating over the new collection for the new user.

refetchConnection:(
count: number,
callback: (error: ?Error) => void,
refetchVariables: ?Variables,
) => ?Disposable,

Arguments:

  • totalCount: The total number of elements to fetch
  • callback: Function called when the new page has been fetched. If an error occurred during refetch, this function will receive that error as an argument.
  • refetchVariables: A potentially new bag of variables to pass to the pagination query when fetching it from the server.

Pagination Example

// Feed.js
import {createPaginationContainer, graphql} from 'react-relay';

class Feed extends React.Component {
render() {
return (
<div>
{this.props.user.feed.edges.map(
edge => <Story story={edge.node} key={edge.node.id} />
)}
<button
onPress={() => this._loadMore()}
title="Load More"
/>
</div>
);
}

_loadMore() {
if (!this.props.relay.hasMore() || this.props.relay.isLoading()) {
return;
}

this.props.relay.loadMore(
10, // Fetch the next 10 feed items
error => {
console.log(error);
},
);
}
}

module.exports = createPaginationContainer(
Feed,
{
user: graphql`
fragment Feed_user on User
@argumentDefinitions(
count: {type: "Int", defaultValue: 10}
cursor: {type: "ID"}
orderby: {type: "[FriendsOrdering]", defaultValue: [DATE_ADDED]}
) {
feed(
first: $count
after: $cursor
orderby: $orderBy # Non-pagination variables
) @connection(key: "Feed_feed") {
edges {
node {
id
...Story_story
}
}
}
}
`,
},
{
direction: 'forward',
getConnectionFromProps(props) {
return props.user && props.user.feed;
},
// This is also the default implementation of `getFragmentVariables` if it isn't provided.
getFragmentVariables(prevVars, totalCount) {
return {
...prevVars,
count: totalCount,
};
},
getVariables(props, {count, cursor}, fragmentVariables) {
return {
count,
cursor,
orderBy: fragmentVariables.orderBy,
// userID isn't specified as an @argument for the fragment, but it should be a variable available for the fragment under the query root.
userID: fragmentVariables.userID,
};
},
query: graphql`
# Pagination query to be fetched upon calling `loadMore`.
# Notice that we re-use our fragment, and the shape of this query matches our fragment spec.
query FeedPaginationQuery(
$count: Int!
$cursor: ID
$orderBy: [FriendsOrdering]!
$userID: ID!
) {
user: node(id: $userID) {
...Feed_user @arguments(count: $count, cursor: $cursor, orderBy: $orderBy)
}
}
`
}
);