useAsyncData
Within your pages, components, and plugins you can use useAsyncData to get access to data that resolves asynchronously.
useAsyncData
is a composable meant to be called directly in a setup function, plugin, or route middleware. It returns reactive composables and handles adding responses to the Nuxt payload so they can be passed from server to client without re-fetching the data on client side when the page hydrates.
Type
function useAsyncData<DataT, DataE>(
handler: (nuxtApp?: NuxtApp) => Promise<DataT>,
options?: AsyncDataOptions<DataT>
): AsyncData<DataT, DataE>
function useAsyncData<DataT, DataE>(
key: string,
handler: (nuxtApp?: NuxtApp) => Promise<DataT>,
options?: AsyncDataOptions<DataT>
): Promise<AsyncData<DataT, DataE>
type AsyncDataOptions<DataT> = {
server?: boolean
lazy?: boolean
immediate?: boolean
deep?: boolean
default?: () => DataT | Ref<DataT> | null
transform?: (input: DataT) => DataT
pick?: string[]
watch?: WatchSource[]
getCachedData?: (key: string) => any
}
type AsyncData<DataT, ErrorT> = {
data: Ref<DataT | null>
pending: Ref<boolean>
refresh: (opts?: AsyncDataExecuteOptions) => Promise<void>
execute: (opts?: AsyncDataExecuteOptions) => Promise<void>
error: Ref<ErrorT | null>
status: Ref<AsyncDataRequestStatus>
};
interface AsyncDataExecuteOptions {
dedupe?: boolean
}
type AsyncDataRequestStatus = 'idle' | 'pending' | 'success' | 'error'
Params
- key: a unique key to ensure that data fetching can be properly de-duplicated across requests. If you do not provide a key, then a key that is unique to the file name and line number of the instance of
useAsyncData
will be generated for you. - handler: an asynchronous function that must return a truthy value (for example, it should not be
undefined
ornull
) or the request may be duplicated on the client side - options:
- server: whether to fetch the data on the server (defaults to
true
) - lazy: whether to resolve the async function after loading the route, instead of blocking client-side navigation (defaults to
false
) - immediate: when set to
false
, will prevent the request from firing immediately. (defaults totrue
) - default: a factory function to set the default value of the
data
, before the async function resolves - useful with thelazy: true
orimmediate: false
option - transform: a function that can be used to alter
handler
function result after resolving - pick: only pick specified keys in this array from the
handler
function result - watch: watch reactive sources to auto-refresh
- getCachedData: a function that receives a cache key and can return cached data if it exists (by default it returns
nuxtApp.payload.data[key]
when hydrating andnuxtApp.static.data[key]
after the app is hydrated). You can use this to build your own custom cache foruseAsyncData
. - deep: return data in a deep ref object (it is
true
by default). It can be set tofalse
to return data in a shallow ref object, which can improve performance if your data does not need to be deeply reactive.
- server: whether to fetch the data on the server (defaults to
Under the hood, lazy: false
uses <Suspense>
to block the loading of the route before the data has been fetched. Consider using lazy: true
and implementing a loading state instead for a snappier user experience.
Return Values
- data: the result of the asynchronous function that is passed in.
- pending: a boolean indicating whether the data is still being fetched.
- refresh/execute: a function that can be used to refresh the data returned by the
handler
function. - error: an error object if the data fetching failed.
- status: a string indicating the status of the data request (
"idle"
,"pending"
,"success"
,"error"
).
By default, Nuxt waits until a refresh
is finished before it can be executed again.
If you have not fetched data on the server (for example, with server: false
), then the data will not be fetched until hydration completes. This means even if you await useAsyncData
on the client side, data
will remain null
within <script setup>
.
Example
const { data, pending, error, refresh } = await useAsyncData(
'mountains',
() => $fetch('https://api.nuxtjs.dev/mountains')
)
Example with watching params change
The built-in watch
option allows automatically rerunning the fetcher function when any changes are detected.
const page = ref(1)
const { data: posts } = await useAsyncData(
'posts',
() => $fetch('https://fakeApi.com/posts', {
params: {
page: page.value
}
}), {
watch: [page]
}
)
useAsyncData
is a reserved function name transformed by the compiler, so you should not name your own function useAsyncData
.