Skip to content

Node.js library that generates React Query (also called TanStack Query) hooks based on an OpenAPI specification file.

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

collink/openapi-react-query-codegen

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

OpenAPI React Query Codegen

Node.js library that generates React Query (also called TanStack Query) hooks based on an OpenAPI specification file.

npm version

Features

  • Generates custom react hooks that use React Query's useQuery, useSuspenseQuery and useMutation hooks
  • Generates query keys and functions for query caching
  • Generates pure TypeScript clients generated by @hey-api/openapi-ts

Installation

$ npm install -D @7nohe/openapi-react-query-codegen

Register the command to the scripts property in your package.json file.

{
  "scripts": {
    "codegen": "openapi-rq -i ./petstore.yaml -c axios"
  }
}

You can also run the command without installing it in your project using the npx command.

$ npx --package @7nohe/openapi-react-query-codegen openapi-rq -i ./petstore.yaml -c axios

Usage

$ openapi-rq --help

Usage: openapi-rq [options]

Generate React Query code based on OpenAPI

Options:
  -V, --version              output the version number
  -i, --input <value>        OpenAPI specification, can be a path, url or string content (required)
  -o, --output <value>       Output directory (default: "openapi")
  -c, --client <value>       HTTP client to generate [fetch, xhr, node, axios, angular] (default: "fetch")
  --request <value>          Path to custom request file
  --format <value>           Process output folder with formatter? ['biome', 'prettier']
  --lint   <value>           Process output folder with linter? ['eslint', 'biome']
  --operationId              Use operation ID to generate operation names?
  --serviceResponse <value>  Define shape of returned value from service calls ['body', 'response'] (default: "body")
  --base <value>             Manually set base in OpenAPI config instead of inferring from server value
  --enums <value>            Generate JavaScript objects from enum definitions? ['javascript', 'typescript']
  --useDateType              Use Date type instead of string for date types for models, this will not convert the data to a Date object
  --debug                    Enable debug mode
  --noSchemas                Disable generating schemas for request and response objects
  --schemaTypes <value>      Define the type of schema generation ['form', 'json'] (default: "json")
  -h, --help                 display help for command

Example Usage

Command

$ openapi-rq -i ./petstore.yaml

Output directory structure

- openapi
  - queries
    - index.ts <- main file that exports common types, variables, and queries. Does not export suspense or prefetch hooks
    - common.ts <- common types
    - queries.ts <- generated query hooks
    - suspenses.ts <- generated suspense hooks
    - prefetch.ts <- generated prefetch hooks learn more about prefetching in in link below
  - requests <- output code generated by @hey-api/openapi-ts

In your app

Using the generated hooks
// App.tsx
import { usePetServiceFindPetsByStatus } from "../openapi/queries";
function App() {
  const { data } = usePetServiceFindPetsByStatus({ status: ["available"] });

  return (
    <div className="App">
      <h1>Pet List</h1>
      <ul>{data?.map((pet) => <li key={pet.id}>{pet.name}</li>)}</ul>
    </div>
  );
}

export default App;
Using the generated typescript client
import { useQuery } from "@tanstack/react-query";
import { PetService } from "../openapi/requests/services";
import { usePetServiceFindPetsByStatusKey } from "../openapi/queries";

function App() {
  // You can still use the auto-generated query key
  const { data } = useQuery({
    queryKey: [usePetServiceFindPetsByStatusKey],
    queryFn: () => {
      // Do something here
      return PetService.findPetsByStatus(["available"]);
    },
  });

  return <div className="App">{/* .... */}</div>;
}

export default App;
Using Suspense Hooks
// App.tsx
import { useDefaultClientFindPetsSuspense } from "../openapi/queries/suspense";
function ChildComponent() {
  const { data } = useDefaultClientFindPetsSuspense({ tags: [], limit: 10 });

  return <ul>{data?.map((pet, index) => <li key={pet.id}>{pet.name}</li>)}</ul>;
}

function ParentComponent() {
  return (
    <>
      <Suspense fallback={<>loading...</>}>
        <ChildComponent />
      </Suspense>
    </>
  );
}

function App() {
  return (
    <div className="App">
      <h1>Pet List</h1>
      <ParentComponent />
    </div>
  );
}

export default App;
Using Mutation hooks
// App.tsx
import { usePetServiceAddPet } from "../openapi/queries";

function App() {
  const { mutate } = usePetServiceAddPet();

  const handleAddPet = () => {
    mutate({ name: "Fluffy", status: "available" });
  };

  return (
    <div className="App">
      <h1>Add Pet</h1>
      <button onClick={handleAddPet}>Add Pet</button>
    </div>
  );
}

export default App;
Invalidating queries after mutation

Invalidating queries after a mutation is important to ensure the cache is updated with the new data. This is done by calling the queryClient.invalidateQueries function with the query key used by the query hook.

Learn more about invalidating queries here.

To ensure the query key is created the same way as the query hook, you can use the query key function exported by the generated query hooks.

import {
  usePetServiceFindPetsByStatus,
  usePetServiceAddPet,
  UsePetServiceFindPetsByStatusKeyFn,
} from "../openapi/queries";

// App.tsx
function App() {
  const [status, setStatus] = React.useState(["available"]);
  const { data } = usePetServiceFindPetsByStatus({ status });
  const { mutate } = usePetServiceAddPet({
    onSuccess: () => {
      queryClient.invalidateQueries({
        // Call the query key function to get the query key
        // This is important to ensure the query key is created the same way as the query hook
        // This insures the cache is invalidated correctly and is typed correctly
        queryKey: [UsePetServiceFindPetsByStatusKeyFn({
          status
        })],
      });
    },
  });

  return (
    <div className="App">
      <h1>Pet List</h1>
      <ul>{data?.map((pet) => <li key={pet.id}>{pet.name}</li>)}</ul>
      <button
        onClick={() => {
          mutate({ name: "Fluffy", status: "available" });
        }}
      >
        Add Pet
      </button>
    </div>
  );
}

export default App;
Runtime Configuration

You can modify the default values used by the generated service calls by modifying the OpenAPI configuration singleton object.

It's default location is openapi/requests/core/OpenAPI.ts and it is also exported from openapi/index.ts

Import the constant into your runtime and modify it before setting up the react app.

/** main.tsx */
import { OpenAPI as OpenAPIConfig } from './openapi/requests/core/OpenAPI';
...
OpenAPIConfig.BASE = 'www.domain.com/api';
OpenAPIConfig.HEADERS = {
  'x-header-1': 'value-1',
  'x-header-2': 'value-2',
};
...
ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById("root") as HTMLElement).render(
  <React.StrictMode>
    <QueryClientProvider client={queryClient}>
      <App />
    </QueryClientProvider>
  </React.StrictMode>
);

Development

Install dependencies

pnpm install

Run tests

pnpm test

Run linter

pnpm lint

Run linter and fix

pnpm lint:fix

Update snapshots

pnpm snapshot

Build example and validate generated code

npm run build && pnpm --filter @7nohe/react-app generate:api && pnpm --filter @7nohe/react-app test:generated 

License

MIT

About

Node.js library that generates React Query (also called TanStack Query) hooks based on an OpenAPI specification file.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • TypeScript 96.2%
  • JavaScript 3.8%