A component library that helps you interact with the Spotify API
- Components for most of Spotify's data types that pass data through render props
- Hooks for most of Spotify's data
- Pass Spotify data with render props
- Use React.Context to pass the access token down the component tree
- Hooks!
- A demo page that uses this library - available here!
- Load more data support (infinite scrolling) - current works for some of the data types
- TypeScript support!
- 100% code coverage
- Hooks for all data types from Spotify's API
- Hooks for using the Spotify Playback SDK
Before version 3.0.0 the parameters to props.children
were passed in this order - data, loading, error
. It is now passed as an object, so you would now use the Album
component like this -
<Album id={...}>
{({ data }) => {
return <></>;
}}
</Album>
As opposed to the previous versions where you would use the components like this -
<Album id={...}>
{(data, loading, error) => {
return <></>;
}}
</Album>
This way you can choose which parameters you would like to have, and if you want just the error parameter you can omit the other two. This works well with the loadMoreData
parameter, you don't need to write all 4 parameters if you just need some of them.
npm install --save react-spotify-api
yarn add react-spotify-api
in order to use the Spotify API you are required to send an access token (read more here)
with every single http request, but the SpotifyApiContext
provider does that for you!
import { SpotifyApiContext } from 'react-spotify-api';
Wrap your app with it (all react-spotify-api components must have a SpotifyApiContext.Provider parent)
<SpotifyApiContext.Provider value={token}>
<App />
</SpotifyApiContext.Provider>
You can now use all components without worrying about getting your access token!
import React, { Component } from 'react';
import { SpotifyApiContext, Artist } from 'react-spotify-api';
function Example(props) {
return (
<SpotifyApiContext.Provider value={props.token}>
<Artist id={props.id}>
{({ data, loading, error }) =>
data ? (
<div>
<h1>{data.name}</h1>
<ul>
{data.genres.map(genre => (
<li key={genre}>{genre}</li>
))}
</ul>
</div>
) : null
}
</Artist>
</SpotifyApiContext.Provider>
);
}
import React from 'react';
import { useArtist } from 'react-spotify-api';
function ExampleHooks(props) {
const { data, loading, error } = useArtist(props.id);
return artist ? (
<div>
<h1>{artist.name}</h1>
<ul>
{artist.genres.map(genre => (
<li key={genre}>{genre}</li>
))}
</ul>
</div>
) : null;
}
- data - Each component has a link to the Spotify API endpoint where you can see the data model for that specific data type
- loading - Boolean (true when loading and false when finished loading)
- error - null when there are no errors but an object when there are - usually containing the error object received by the
fetch
api, so it looks something like:{status: 404, message: "Not Found"}
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details
MIT © idanlo