In addition to our "standard" loading actions for single, all and many entity retrievals, we also provide two additional loading actions: LoadPage
and LoadRange
. You may wonder why both, and again it boils down to semantics, behavior. Both are necessary to support different kinds of data loading behavior, as will become evident here.
Loading a "range" of data is similar in concept to loading a page of data, however it differs in semantics and actual behavior in the context of NgRx Auto-Entity and the way reduction of page loads are handled vs. the way reduction of ranged loads are handled.
The LoadRange
generic action supports a more modern approach to handling very large, and more specifically arbitrarily sized datasets called "infinite scrolling." This technique is usually implemented on lists of items, such as products in a catalog, that may have relatively arbitrary and often-changing total entity counts. When a user scrolls to the bottom of the browser page, the next "range" of products, starting from the last+1 of the currently displayed range, is automatically retrieved from the server and displayed as a continuation of any previously displayed list.
When loading a range, unlike loading a page, any newly loaded entities for this type will be merged into existing state, preserving any previously loaded entities and including any newly loaded entities. As with paged loads, this ensures that bandwidth is used efficiently, however keep in mind that for very large data sets, continuous loading of subsequent ranges could eventually require significant amounts of browser memory to store all the information in state. Further, due to the pure
(side-effect free) nature by which new versions of state must be created with @ngrx, updating state with a large volume of previously loaded entities may start to become a lengthy operation.
Loading ranges of data one at a time with NgRx Auto-Entity is also very easy. Simply use the LoadRange
action, or the loadRange
method on your entity facades, along with the Range
parameter:
When implementing your entity service, you will have access to the Range
object provided in the initial action, which may be leveraged in your API call:
Note the use of pipe()
on the http
call here, and the transformation of the response. Also not the return type of the loadRange
method. NgRx Auto-Entity requires additional meta-data about what range was loaded as well as the total number of entities that may be ranged through, in order to store that information in state and make it available to components and your UI (for proper handling of infinite scrolling behavior, for example).
It is important to understand the nature of the data that must be returned by the loadRange
method in your entity services. The return type is IEntityWithRangeInfo<TModel>
which is defined as so:
The child type of the property rangeInfo
, of type IRangeInfo
is defined as so:
Unlike with paged data, where a total count is essential in order to properly calculate how many pages of data there are, ranged data does not necessarily require an exact total count. For use cases where a total count is not required, you may simply specify Infinity
or any other constant that allows you to implement your ranged loads and UI behavior properly.
In the event that you do require an actual total count, see the paged loads documentation for various ways to retrieve total counts from the server.