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Basic usage

Replacing React.useState with useQueryState

Prerequisite

Have you setup your app with the appropriate adapter? Then you are all set!

If you are using React.useState to manage your local UI state, you can replace it with useQueryState to sync it with the URL.

'use client'
 
import { useQueryState } from 'nuqs'
 
export function Demo() {
  const [name, setName] = useQueryState('name')
  return (
    <>
      <input value={name || ''} onChange={e => setName(e.target.value)} />
      <button onClick={() => setName(null)}>Clear</button>
      <p>Hello, {name || 'anonymous visitor'}!</p>
    </>
  )
}
Demo loading...

useQueryState takes one required argument: the key to use in the query string.

Like React.useState, it returns an array with the value present in the query string as a string (or null if none was found), and a state updater function.

Example outputs for our demo example:

URLname valueNotes
/nullNo name key in URL
/?name=''Empty string
/?name=foo'foo'
/?name=2'2'Always returns a string by default, see Parsers

Tip

Setting null as a value will remove the key from the query string.

Default values

When the query string is not present in the URL, the default behaviour is to return null as state.

It can make state updating and UI rendering tedious. Take this example of a simple counter stored in the URL:

import { useQueryState, parseAsInteger } from 'nuqs'
 
export default () => {
  const [count, setCount] = useQueryState('count', parseAsInteger)
  return (
    <>
      <pre>count: {count}</pre>
      <button onClick={() => setCount(0)}>Reset</button>
      {/* handling null values in setCount is annoying: */}
      <button onClick={() => setCount(c => c ?? 0 + 1)}>+</button>
      <button onClick={() => setCount(c => c ?? 0 - 1)}>-</button>
      <button onClick={() => setCount(null)}>Clear</button>
    </>
  )
}

You can provide a default value as the second argument to useQueryState (or via the .withDefault builder method on parsers):

const [count] = useQueryState('count', parseAsInteger)
//      ^? number | null
 
const [count] = useQueryState('count', parseAsInteger.withDefault(0))
//      ^? number

It makes it much easier to handle state updates:

const increment = () => setCount(c => c + 1) // c will never be null
const decrement = () => setCount(c => c - 1) // c will never be null
const clearCount = () => setCount(null) // Remove query from the URL

Note

The default value is internal to React, it will not be written to the URL unless you set it explicitly.

Tip

The default value is also returned if the value is invalid for the parser.

Tip

Setting the state to null when a default value is specified:

  1. Clears the query from the URL
  2. Sets the state to the default value

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