Using async atoms, you gain access to real-world data while still managing them directly from your atoms and with incredible ease.
We separate async atoms in two main categories: •Async read atoms •Async write atoms
Let's see first the async read atoms.
The read
function of an atom can return a promise.
const counter = atom(0); const asyncAtom = atom(async (get) => get(counter) * 5);
Jotai is inherently leveraging Suspense
to handle asynchronous flows.
<Suspense fallback={<span>loading...</span>}> <AsyncComponent /> </Suspense>
But there is a more jotai way of doing this with the loadable api
present in jotai/utils
. By simply wrapping the atom in loadable util and it returns the value with one of the three states: loading
, hasData
and hasError
.
{ state: 'loading' | 'hasData' | 'hasError', data?: any, error?: any, }
import { loadable } from "jotai/utils" const countAtom = atom(0); const asyncAtom = atom(async (get) => get(countAtom)); const loadableAtom = loadable(asyncAtom) const AsyncComponent = () => { const [value] = useAtom(loadableAtom) if (value.state === 'hasError') return <div>{value.error}</div> if (value.state === 'loading') { return <div>Loading...</div> } return <div>Value: {value.data}</div>