Files
countries/examples/react/README.md
Trevor Blades 855e4de3e3 Fix image path
2019-02-13 12:43:06 -08:00

3.0 KiB

React example

One practical use of this API is to create a country select field that fetches its options dynamically. Normally, you would need to install an npm package or create a file in your project containing the necessary data (normally country codes and names) and bundle that data with your app code. This results in a lot of extra kilobytes hanging around in your bundle for a feature that might not always get rendered or used. Here's a simple data size comparison:

  • 50.1 KB with the countries export from Countries List
  • 14.2 KB with this API (~70% smaller)

This example uses React and Apollo GraphQL tools. Apollo's GraphQL client and React components make it simple to execute, handle, and cache GraphQL queries. You can also accomplish this by sending a POST request to this API using fetch or your favourite request library, but this example won't cover that.

Install dependencies

$ npm install react react-dom react-apollo apollo-boost graphql graphql-tag

Build the component

import ApolloClient from 'apollo-boost';
import React, {Component} from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import gql from 'graphql-tag';
import {Query} from 'react-apollo';

// initialize a GraphQL client
const client = new ApolloClient({
  uri: 'https://countries.trevorblades.com'
});

// write a GraphQL query that asks for names and codes for all countries
const GET_COUNTRIES = gql`
  {
    countries {
      name
      code
    }
  }
`;

// create a component that renders an API data-powered select input
class CountrySelect extends Component {
  state = {
    country: 'US'
  };

  // set the selected country to the new input value
  onCountryChange = event => {
    this.setState({country: event.target.value});
  };

  render() {
    return (
      <Query query={GET_COUNTRIES} client={client}>
        {({loading, error, data}) => {
          if (loading) return <p>Loading...</p>;
          if (error) return <p>{error.message}</p>;
          return (
            <select value={this.state.country} onChange={this.onCountryChange}>
              {data.countries.map(country => (
                <option key={country.code} value={country.code}>
                  {country.name}
                </option>
              ))}
            </select>
          );
        }}
      </Query>
    );
  }
}

ReactDOM.render(<CountrySelect />, document.getElementById('root'));

Now you're worldwide! 🌎

Edit Countries GraphQL API example

Check out the CodeSandbox link above for a complete, working copy of this example. This CountrySelect component only fetches its country data when it mounts. That means that if it exists within an unmatched route or the falsey end of a condition, it doesn't request any data.

Mr. Worldwide

Reach for the stars, and if you don't grab 'em, at least you'll fall on top of the world

— Pitbull