46

I am pretty much familiar with the async await but with back end nodejs. But there is a scenario came across to me where I have to use it on front end.

I am getting array of objects and in that objects I am getting lat lng of the places. Now using react-geocode I can get the place name for a single lat lng but I want to use that inside the map function to get the places names. SO as we know it async call I have to use async await over there.

Here is the code

import Geocode from "react-geocode";
render = async() => {
  const {
    phase,
    getCompanyUserRidesData
  } = this.props   
                      
  return (
    <div>
       <tbody>                   
        await Promise.all(_.get(this.props, 'getCompanyUserRidesData', []).map(async(userRides,index) => {
          const address = await Geocode.fromLatLng(22.685131,75.873468)
          console.log(address.results[0].formatted_address)                         
         return ( 
          <tr key={index}>
            <td>
            {address.results[0].formatted_address}
            </td>
            <td>Goa</td>
            <td>asdsad</td>
            <td>{_.get(userRides,'driverId.email', '')}</td>
            <td>{_.get(userRides,'driverId.mobile', '')}</td>
          </tr>
        )
        }))
      </tbody>
    </div>
  )
}

But when I use async with the map function here it doesn't return anything. Can anyone please help me where I going wrong?

10
  • 6
    render function renders UI to the browser, so that is not the place you want to do your asynchronous calls
    – Agney
    Dec 17, 2018 at 17:04
  • So is there any other way to work around?
    – Profer
    Dec 17, 2018 at 17:06
  • 1
    @Profer yes. Have it be state on a parent component that conditionally renders the child once the state is set (i.e. the asynchronous data comes in). That's pretty standard in any React app and IIRC is early on in the official tutorial (I may be misremembering that). Dec 17, 2018 at 17:08
  • 1
    @JaredSmith could you please show an example. BTW what is IIRC?
    – Profer
    Dec 17, 2018 at 17:12
  • 1
    @Profer If I Remember Correctly Dec 17, 2018 at 17:18

2 Answers 2

68

You should always separate concerns like fetching data from concerns like displaying it. Here there's a parent component that fetches the data via AJAX and then conditionally renders a pure functional child component when the data comes in.

class ParentThatFetches extends React.Component {
  constructor () {
    this.state = {};
  }

  componentDidMount () {
    fetch('/some/async/data')
      .then(resp => resp.json())
      .then(data => this.setState({data}));
  }

  render () {
    {this.state.data && (
      <Child data={this.state.data} />
    )}
  }
}

const Child = ({data}) => (
  <tr>
    {data.map((x, i) => (<td key={i}>{x}</td>))}
  </tr>
);

I didn't actually run it so their may be some minor errors, and if your data records have unique ids you should use those for the key attribute instead of the array index, but you get the jist.

UPDATE

Same thing but simpler and shorter using hooks:

const ParentThatFetches = () => {
  const [data, updateData] = useState();
  useEffect(() => {
    const getData = async () => {
      const resp = await fetch('some/url');
      const json = await resp.json()
      updateData(json);
    }
    getData();
  }, []);

  return data && <Child data={data} />
}
4

With the wrapper function below, delayed_render(), you can write asynchronous code inside a React component function:

function delayed_render(async_fun, deps=[]) {
    const [output, setOutput] = useState()
    useEffect(async () => setOutput(await async_fun()), deps)
    return (output === undefined) ? null : output
}

This wrapper performs delayed rendering: it returns null on initial rendering attempt (to skip rendering of this particular component), then asynchronously calculates (useEffect()) the proper rendering output through a given async_fun() and invokes re-rendering to inject the final result to the DOM. The use of this wrapper is as simple as:

function Component(props) {
    return delayed_render(async () => { /* any rendering code with awaits... */ })
}

For example:

function Component(props) {
    return delayed_render(async () => {
        const resp = await fetch(props.targetURL)     // await here is OK!
        const json = await resp.json()
        return <Child data={json} />
    })
}

UPDATE: added the deps argument. If your async_fun depends on props or state variables, all of them must be listed in deps to allow re-rendering. Note that passing deps=null (always re-render) is not an option here, because the output is a state variable, too, and would be implicitly included in dependencies, which would cause infinite re-rendering after the async_fun call completes.

This solution was inspired by, and is a generalization of, the Jared Smith's one.

0

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