Rendering Connections
In Relay, in order to display a list of data that is backed by a GraphQL connection, first you need to declare a fragment that queries for a connection:
const {graphql} = require('RelayModern');
const userFragment = graphql`
fragment UserFragment on User {
name
friends(after: $cursor, first: $count)
@connection(key: "UserFragment_friends") {
edges {
node {
...FriendComponent
}
}
}
}
`;
- In the example above, we're querying for the
friends
field, which is a connection; in other words, it adheres to the connection spec. Specifically, we can query theedges
andnode
s in the connection; theedges
usually contain information about the relationship between the entities, while thenode
s are the actual entities at the other end of the relationship; in this case, thenode
s are objects of typeUser
representing the user's friends. - In order to indicate to Relay that we want to perform pagination over this connection, we need to mark the field with the
@connection
directive. We must also provide a static unique identifier for this connection, known as thekey
. We recommend the following naming convention for the connection key:<fragment_name>_<field_name>
. - We will go into more detail later as to why it is necessary to mark the field as a
@connection
and give it a uniquekey
in our Updating Connections section.
In order to render this fragment which queries for a connection, we can use the usePaginationFragment
Hook:
import type {FriendsListComponent_user$key} from 'FriendsList_user.graphql';
const React = require('React');
const {Suspense} = require('React');
const {graphql, usePaginationFragment} = require('react-relay');
type Props = {
user: FriendsListComponent_user$key,
};
function FriendsListComponent(props: Props) {
const {data} = usePaginationFragment(
graphql`
fragment FriendsListComponent_user on User
@refetchable(queryName: "FriendsListPaginationQuery") {
name
friends(first: $count, after: $cursor)
@connection(key: "FriendsList_user_friends") {
edges {
node {
...FriendComponent
}
}
}
}
`,
props.user,
);
return (
<>
{data.name != null ? <h1>Friends of {data.name}:</h1> : null}
<div>
{/* Extract each friend from the resulting data */}
{(data.friends?.edges ?? []).map(edge => {
const node = edge.node;
return (
<Suspense fallback={<Glimmer />}>
<FriendComponent user={node} />
</Suspense>
);
})}
</div>
</>
);
}
module.exports = FriendsListComponent;
usePaginationFragment
behaves the same way as auseFragment
(see the Fragments section), so our list of friends is available underdata.friends.edges.node
, as declared by the fragment. However, it also has a few additions:- It expects a fragment that is a connection field annotated with the
@connection
directive - It expects a fragment that is annotated with the
@refetchable
directive. Note that@refetchable
directive can only be added to fragments that are "refetchable", that is, on fragments that are onViewer
, onQuery
, on any type that implementsNode
(i.e. a type that has anid
field), or on a@fetchable
type.
- It expects a fragment that is a connection field annotated with the
- It takes two Flow type parameters: the type of the generated query (in our case
FriendsListPaginationQuery
), and a second type which can always be inferred, so you only need to pass underscore (_
).
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