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use-url-query-state

v1.0.3

Published

Simple light weight React hook to use the url query parameters to store state

Downloads

10

Readme

useUrlQueryState

build

useUrlQueryState is a React hook that makes it easy to manage the state in the URL query string.

Take a look at this Demo to see it in action.

useUrlQueryState is dependent on React Router.

Why

In some cases, it's beneficial to use the route to store your application state. It allows the user to refresh or bookmark a page and keep its state. For example, if a user wants to share or bookmark a specific search result.

Getting Started

To use useUrlQueryState, you can install it via npm:

npm install --save use-url-query-state

Import the hook into your React component:

import { useUrlQueryState } from 'use-url-query-state';

Instantiate a new state variable:

const [state, setState] = useUrlQueryState(paramName, initialState);

Here is an example of the hook in a component:

import { useUrlQueryState } from 'use-url-query-state';

function Component = () => {
   const [count, setCount] = useUrlQueryState("c", 0);

   return (
     <button onClick={() => setCount(count + 1)}>Count: {count}</button>
   );
}

In the example above, we initialize the count state to 0 and use useUrlQueryState to read and write the value to the c query parameter in the URL.

API

The useUrlQueryState hook provides the following API:

useUrlQueryState(paramName, defaultValue)

This hook returns an array containing the current value of the state and a function to update the state value. The paramName parameter is the name of the query parameter in the URL, and the defaultValue parameter is the initial value of the state.

Contributions

If you have any comments or suggestions, feel free to open an issue or pull request on the repository. We welcome any contributions or feedback to help improve the functionality and usability.

License

useUrlQueryState is released under the MIT License.