1

I've been following along the REDUX essentials guide and I'm at part 8, combining RTK Query with the createEntityAdapter. I'm using the guide to implement it in a personal project where my getUni endpoint has an argument named country, as you can see from the code snippet below.

I'm wondering is there anyway to access the country argument value from the state in universityAdaptor.getSelector(state => ) at the bottom of the snippet, as the query key name keeps changing.

import {
  createEntityAdapter,
  createSelector,
  nanoid
} from "@reduxjs/toolkit";
import {
  apiSlice
} from "../api/apiSlice";


const universityAdapter = createEntityAdapter({})

const initialState = universityAdapter.getInitialState();

export const extendedApiSlice = apiSlice.injectEndpoints({
  endpoints: builder => ({
    getUni: builder.query({
      query: country => ({
        url: `http://universities.hipolabs.com/search?country=${country}`,
      }),
      transformResponse: responseData => {
        let resConvert = responseData.slice()
          .sort((a, b) => a.name.localeCompare(b.name))
          .map(each => {
            return { ...each,
              id: nanoid()
            }
          });

        return universityAdapter.setAll(initialState, resConvert)
      }
    })
  })
});

export const {
  useGetUniQuery
} = extendedApiSlice;


export const {
  selectAll: getAllUniversity
} = universityAdapter.getSelectors(state => {
  return Object.keys({ ...state.api.queries[<DYNAMIC_QUERY_NAME>]data }).length === 0  
? initialState : { ...state.api.queries[<DYNAMIC_QUERY_NAME>]data }
})

UPDATE: I got it working with a turnery operator due to the multiple redux Actions created when RTK Query handles fetching. Wondering if this is best practice as I still haven't figured out how to access the country argument.

export const { selectAll: getAllUniversity } = universityAdapter
  .getSelectors(state => {

  return !Object.values(state.api.queries)[0]
    ? initialState : Object.values(state.api.queries)[0].status !== 'fulfilled'
      ? initialState : Object.values(state.api.queries)[0].data
})

4 Answers 4

2

I wrote that "Essentials" tutorial :)

I'm actually a bit confused what your question is - can you clarify what specifically you're trying to do?

That said, I'll try to offer some hopefully relevant info.

First, you don't need to manually call someEndpoint.select() most of the time - instead, call const { data } = useGetThingQuery("someArg"), and RTKQ will fetch and return it. You only need to call someEndpoint.select() if you're manually constructing a selector for use elsewhere.

Second, if you are manually trying to construct a selector, keep in mind that the point of someEndpoint.select() is to construct "a selector that gives you back the entire cache entry for that cache key". What you usually want from that cache entry is just the received value, which is stored as cacheEntry.data, and in this case that will contain the normalized { ids : [], entities: {} } lookup table you returned from transformResponse().

Notionally, you might be able to do something like this:

const selectNormalizedPokemonData = someApi.endpoints.getAllPokemon.select();

// These selectors expect the entity state as an arg, 
// not the entire Redux root state: 
// https://redux-toolkit.js.org/api/createEntityAdapter#selector-functions
const localizedPokemonSelectors = pokemonAdapter.getSelectors();

const selectPokemonEntryById = createSelector(
  selectNormalizedPokemonData ,
  (state, pokemonId) => pokemonId,
  (pokemonData, pokemonId) => {
    return localizedPokemonSelectors.selectById(pokemonData, pokemonId);
  }
)
3
  • Hey, thanks for responding! I've been able to digest and keep up with the material, so kudos to great documentation! It goes a long way. At the bottom of my original snippet I'm attempting to use it similarly to the "Essentials" demo, (Part 8 transforming Responses method) except in my case I had an argument in the getUni query. My apologies about the confusing question. I'm trying to understand how to use the built in getSelectors when using the createEntityAdapter with RTK Query. In the documentation it was achieved via someEndpoint.select() but maybe there is a better way.
    – Kirill
    May 15, 2022 at 1:15
  • I know I could technically manipulate it in my component from {data} = useGetThingQuery("someArg") but in an attempt to keep my component logic simplified, I wanted to see if it is achievable with the tools in the redux toolkit (certain there is and I'm missing a step). Thanks again for helping out
    – Kirill
    May 15, 2022 at 1:18
  • 1
    Updated my answer with a snippet that I think is along the lines of what you're looking for. If you're still stuck, I'd suggest coming by the #redux channel in the Reactiflux Discord ( reactiflux.com ) and asking there, and we can help. May 15, 2022 at 21:12
0

Some more info that may help see what's happening with the code in the Essentials tutorial, background - getLists endpoint takes 1 parameter, select in the service:

export const getListsResult = (state: RootState) => {
  return state.tribeId ? extendedApi.endpoints.getLists.select(state.tribeId) : [];
};

And my selector in the slice:

export const selectAllLists = createSelector(getListsResult, (listsResult) => {
  console.log('inside of selectAllLists selector = ', listsResult);
  return listsResult.data;
  // return useSelector(listsResult) ?? [];
});

Now this console logs listsResult as ƒ memoized() { function! Not something that can have .data property as tutorial suggests. Additionally return useSelector(listsResult) - makes it work, by executing the memoized function.

This is how far I got, but from what I understand, the code in the Essentials tutorial does not work as it is...

However going here https://codesandbox.io/s/distracted-chandrasekhar-r4mcn1?file=/src/features/users/usersSlice.js and adding same console log:

const selectUsersData = createSelector(selectUsersResult, (usersResult) => {
  console.log("usersResult", usersResult);
  return usersResult.data;
});

Shows it is not returning a memorised function, but an object with data on it instead.

Wonder if the difference happening because I have a parameter on my endpoint...

0
0

select returns a memoized curry function. Thus, call it with first with corresponding arg aka tribeId in your case and then with state. This will give you the result object back for corresponding chained selectors.

export const getListsResult = (state: RootState) => {
  return state.tribeId ? extendedApi.endpoints.getLists.select(state.tribeId)(state) : [];
};
0

The intention of the getUni endpoint was to produce an array of university data. To implement the .getSelector function to retrieve that array, I looped over all query values, searching for a getUni query and ensuring they were fulfilled. The bottom turnery operator confirms the getUni endpoint was fired at least once otherwise, it returns the initialState value.

export const { selectAll: getAllUniversity } = universityAdapter
  .getSelectors(state => {
    let newObj = {};

    for (const value of Object.values(state.api.queries)) {
      if (value?.endpointName === 'getUni' && value?.status === 'fulfilled') {
        newObj = value.data;
      }
    }

    return !Object.values(newObj)[0] ? initialState : newObj;
  })

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