Overview
Asynchronous data caching, refetching & invalidation library for Flutter. Fl-Query lets you manage & distribute your async data without touching any global state
Fl-Query makes asynchronous server state management a breeze in flutter
Features
- Async data caching & management
- Smart + effective refetching
- Optimistic updates
- Automatically cached data invalidation & unneeded query/mutation garbage collection
- Infinite pagination via
InfiniteQuery
- Lazy persistent cache (Uses hive for persisting query results to disk) (optional)
- Easy to write & understand code. Follows DRY (Don't repeat yourself) convention
- Compatible with both vanilla Flutter & elite flutter_hooks
Installation
Regular installation:
$ flutter pub add fl_query
For elite flutter_hooks user (Welcome to the flutter cool community btw😎)
$ flutter pub add flutter_hooks fl_query_hooks
Basic Usage
Initialize the cache databases in your main
method
fl-query uses hive for persisting data to disk
void main()async {
WidgetsFlutterBinding.ensureInitialized();
await QueryClient.initialize(cachePrefix: 'fl_query_example');
runApp(MyApp());
}
In MyApp
Widget's build method wrap your MaterialApp
with with QueryClientProvider
widget
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return QueryClientProvider(
child: MaterialApp(
title: 'Fl-Query Example App',
theme: ThemeData(
useMaterial3: true,
primarySwatch: Colors.blue,
),
home: const MyHomePage(),
),
);
}
Let's write use a Query
now
FL-Query provides a QueryBuilder
widget that creates and listens to the specified Query
and re-runs the builder function whenever there's an update
It has 2 required parameters key
(unnamed) & builder
class MyApp extends StatelessWidget{
MyApp({super.key});
build(context){
return QueryBuilder<String, dynamic>(
'hello',
() {
return Future.delayed(
const Duration(seconds: 6), () => 'Hello World!');
},
initial: 'A replacement',
jsonConfig: JsonConfig(
fromJson: (json) => json['data'],
toJson: (data) => {'data': data},
),
onData: (value) {
debugPrint('onData: $value');
},
onError: (error) {
debugPrint('onError: $error');
},
builder: (context, query) {
if (query.isLoading) {
return const Center(
child: CircularProgressIndicator(),
);
} else if (query.hasError) {
return Center(
child: Text(query.error.toString()),
);
}
return Center(
child: Text(query.data ?? "Unfortunately, there's no data"),
);
},
);
}
}
And if you're using flutter_hooks you got that too
class MyApp extends HookWidget{
MyApp({super.key});
build(context){
final query = useQuery<String, dynamic>(
'hello',
() {
return Future.delayed(
const Duration(seconds: 6), () => 'Hello World!');
},
initial: 'A replacement',
jsonConfig: JsonConfig(
fromJson: (json) => json['data'],
toJson: (data) => {'data': data},
),
onData: (value) {
debugPrint('onData: $value');
},
onError: (error) {
debugPrint('onError: $error');
},
);
if (query.isLoading) {
return const Center(
child: CircularProgressIndicator(),
);
} else if (query.hasError) {
return Center(
child: Text(query.error.toString()),
);
}
return Center(
child: Text(query.data ?? "Unfortunately, there's no data"),
);
}
}
Why?
The main purpose of Fl-Query is providing the easiest way to manage the messy server-state part requiring the least amount of code with code reusability & performance. This let's you focus more on those cool UI animations & transitions✨. Leave the boring stuff to Fl-Query
Q. Isn't FutureBuilder
good?
No, of course not. Unless you're from 2013 or your app is a purely offline app
Q. So FutureProvider
from riverpod or provider not enough?
Probably yes. Although riverpod@v2 has added a lot of caching related features but still optimistic updates, periodic refetching & disk persistence are missing. Let's not forget about infinite pagination, it's a nightmare😅. In case of provider, same story. It's a great package but it's not the easiest one for server-state management