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expo/expo-data-fetching

expo

expo-data-fetching

Framework (OSS). Use when implementing or debugging ANY network request, API call, or data fetching. Covers fetch API, React Query, SWR, error handling, caching, offline support, and Expo Router data loaders (`useLoaderData`).

global
New~2.7k
v1.0Saved Jul 11, 2026

Expo Networking

You MUST use this skill for ANY networking work including API requests, data fetching, caching, or network debugging.

References

Consult these resources as needed:

references/
  expo-router-loaders.md        Route-level data loading with Expo Router loaders (web, SDK 55+)
  offline-and-cancellation.md   NetInfo network status, offline-first React Query, AbortController

When to Use

Use this skill when:

  • Implementing API requests
  • Setting up data fetching (React Query, SWR)
  • Using Expo Router data loaders (useLoaderData, web SDK 55+)
  • Debugging network failures
  • Implementing caching strategies
  • Handling offline scenarios
  • Authentication/token management
  • Configuring API URLs and environment variables

Preferences

  • Avoid axios, prefer expo/fetch

Common Issues & Solutions

1. Basic Fetch Usage

Simple GET request:

const fetchUser = async (userId: string) => {
  const response = await fetch(`https://api.example.com/users/${userId}`);

  if (!response.ok) {
    throw new Error(`HTTP error! status: ${response.status}`);
  }

  return response.json();
};

POST request with body:

const createUser = async (userData: UserData) => {
  const response = await fetch("https://api.example.com/users", {
    method: "POST",
    headers: {
      "Content-Type": "application/json",
      Authorization: `Bearer ${token}`,
    },
    body: JSON.stringify(userData),
  });

  if (!response.ok) {
    const error = await response.json();
    throw new Error(error.message);
  }

  return response.json();
};

2. React Query (TanStack Query)

Setup:

// app/_layout.tsx
import { QueryClient, QueryClientProvider } from "@tanstack/react-query";

const queryClient = new QueryClient({
  defaultOptions: {
    queries: {
      staleTime: 1000 * 60 * 5, // 5 minutes
      retry: 2,
    },
  },
});

export default function RootLayout() {
  return (
    <QueryClientProvider client={queryClient}>
      <Stack />
    </QueryClientProvider>
  );
}

Fetching data:

import { useQuery } from "@tanstack/react-query";

function UserProfile({ userId }: { userId: string }) {
  const { data, isLoading, error, refetch } = useQuery({
    queryKey: ["user", userId],
    queryFn: () => fetchUser(userId),
  });

  if (isLoading) return <Loading />;
  if (error) return <Error message={error.message} />;

  return <Profile user={data} />;
}

Mutations:

import { useMutation, useQueryClient } from "@tanstack/react-query";

function CreateUserForm() {
  const queryClient = useQueryClient();

  const mutation = useMutation({
    mutationFn: createUser,
    onSuccess: () => {
      // Invalidate and refetch
      queryClient.invalidateQueries({ queryKey: ["users"] });
    },
  });

  const handleSubmit = (data: UserData) => {
    mutation.mutate(data);
  };

  return <Form onSubmit={handleSubmit} isLoading={mutation.isPending} />;
}

3. Error Handling

Comprehensive error handling:

class ApiError extends Error {
  constructor(message: string, public status: number, public code?: string) {
    super(message);
    this.name = "ApiError";
  }
}

const fetchWithErrorHandling = async (url: string, options?: RequestInit) => {
  try {
    const response = await fetch(url, options);

    if (!response.ok) {
      const error = await response.json().catch(() => ({}));
      throw new ApiError(
        error.message || "Request failed",
        response.status,
        error.code
      );
    }

    return response.json();
  } catch (error) {
    if (error instanceof ApiError) {
      throw error;
    }
    // Network error (no internet, timeout, etc.)
    throw new ApiError("Network error", 0, "NETWORK_ERROR");
  }
};

Retry logic:

const fetchWithRetry = async (
  url: string,
  options?: RequestInit,
  retries = 3
) => {
  for (let i = 0; i < retries; i++) {
    try {
      return await fetchWithErrorHandling(url, options);
    } catch (error) {
      if (i === retries - 1) throw error;
      // Exponential backoff
      await new Promise((r) => setTimeout(r, Math.pow(2, i) * 1000));
    }
  }
};

4. Authentication

Token management:

import * as SecureStore from "expo-secure-store";

const TOKEN_KEY = "auth_token";

export const auth = {
  getToken: () => SecureStore.getItemAsync(TOKEN_KEY),
  setToken: (token: string) => SecureStore.setItemAsync(TOKEN_KEY, token),
  removeToken: () => SecureStore.deleteItemAsync(TOKEN_KEY),
};

// Authenticated fetch wrapper
const authFetch = async (url: string, options: RequestInit = {}) => {
  const token = await auth.getToken();

  return fetch(url, {
    ...options,
    headers: {
      ...options.headers,
      Authorization: token ? `Bearer ${token}` : "",
    },
  });
};

Token refresh:

let isRefreshing = false;
let refreshPromise: Promise<string> | null = null;

const getValidToken = async (): Promise<string> => {
  const token = await auth.getToken();

  if (!token || isTokenExpired(token)) {
    if (!isRefreshing) {
      isRefreshing = true;
      refreshPromise = refreshToken().finally(() => {
        isRefreshing = false;
        refreshPromise = null;
      });
    }
    return refreshPromise!;
  }

  return token;
};

5. Offline Support

Network-status detection with NetInfo and offline-first React Query setup: see ./references/offline-and-cancellation.md.


6. Environment Variables

Using environment variables for API configuration:

Expo supports environment variables with the EXPO_PUBLIC_ prefix. These are inlined at build time and available in your JavaScript code.

// .env
EXPO_PUBLIC_API_URL=https://api.example.com
EXPO_PUBLIC_API_VERSION=v1

// Usage in code
const API_URL = process.env.EXPO_PUBLIC_API_URL;

const fetchUsers = async () => {
  const response = await fetch(`${API_URL}/users`);
  return response.json();
};

Environment-specific configuration:

// .env.development
EXPO_PUBLIC_API_URL=http://localhost:3000

// .env.production
EXPO_PUBLIC_API_URL=https://api.production.com

Creating an API client with environment config:

// api/client.ts
const BASE_URL = process.env.EXPO_PUBLIC_API_URL;

if (!BASE_URL) {
  throw new Error("EXPO_PUBLIC_API_URL is not defined");
}

export const apiClient = {
  get: async <T,>(path: string): Promise<T> => {
    const response = await fetch(`${BASE_URL}${path}`);
    if (!response.ok) throw new Error(`HTTP ${response.status}`);
    return response.json();
  },

  post: async <T,>(path: string, body: unknown): Promise<T> => {
    const response = await fetch(`${BASE_URL}${path}`, {
      method: "POST",
      headers: { "Content-Type": "application/json" },
      body: JSON.stringify(body),
    });
    if (!response.ok) throw new Error(`HTTP ${response.status}`);
    return response.json();
  },
};

Important notes:

  • Only variables prefixed with EXPO_PUBLIC_ are exposed to the client bundle
  • Never put secrets (API keys with write access, database passwords) in EXPO_PUBLIC_ variables—they're visible in the built app
  • Environment variables are inlined at build time, not runtime
  • Restart the dev server after changing .env files
  • For server-side secrets in API routes, use variables without the EXPO_PUBLIC_ prefix

TypeScript support:

// types/env.d.ts
declare global {
  namespace NodeJS {
    interface ProcessEnv {
      EXPO_PUBLIC_API_URL: string;
      EXPO_PUBLIC_API_VERSION?: string;
    }
  }
}

export {};

7. Request Cancellation

AbortController on unmount (React Query cancels automatically): see ./references/offline-and-cancellation.md.


Decision Tree

User asks about networking
  |-- Route-level data loading (web, SDK 55+)?
  |   \-- Expo Router loaders — see references/expo-router-loaders.md
  |
  |-- Basic fetch?
  |   \-- Use fetch API with error handling
  |
  |-- Need caching/state management?
  |   |-- Complex app -> React Query (TanStack Query)
  |   \-- Simpler needs -> SWR or custom hooks
  |
  |-- Authentication?
  |   |-- Token storage -> expo-secure-store
  |   \-- Token refresh -> Implement refresh flow
  |
  |-- Error handling?
  |   |-- Network errors -> Check connectivity first
  |   |-- HTTP errors -> Parse response, throw typed errors
  |   \-- Retries -> Exponential backoff
  |
  |-- Offline support?
  |   |-- Check status -> NetInfo
  |   \-- Queue requests -> React Query persistence
  |
  |-- Environment/API config?
  |   |-- Client-side URLs -> EXPO_PUBLIC_ prefix in .env
  |   |-- Server secrets -> Non-prefixed env vars (API routes only)
  |   \-- Multiple environments -> .env.development, .env.production
  |
  \-- Performance?
      |-- Caching -> React Query with staleTime
      |-- Deduplication -> React Query handles this
      \-- Cancellation -> AbortController or React Query

Common Mistakes

Wrong: No error handling

const data = await fetch(url).then((r) => r.json());

Right: Check response status

const response = await fetch(url);
if (!response.ok) throw new Error(`HTTP ${response.status}`);
const data = await response.json();

Wrong: Storing tokens in AsyncStorage

await AsyncStorage.setItem("token", token); // Not secure!

Right: Use SecureStore for sensitive data

await SecureStore.setItemAsync("token", token);

Example Invocations

User: "How do I make API calls in React Native?" -> Use fetch, wrap with error handling

User: "Should I use React Query or SWR?" -> React Query for complex apps, SWR for simpler needs

User: "My app needs to work offline" -> Use NetInfo for status, React Query persistence for caching

User: "How do I handle authentication tokens?" -> Store in expo-secure-store, implement refresh flow

User: "API calls are slow" -> Check caching strategy, use React Query staleTime User: "How do I configure different API URLs for dev and prod?" -> Use EXPO_PUBLIC_ env vars with .env.development and .env.production files User: "Where should I put my API key?" -> Client-safe keys: EXPO_PUBLIC_ in .env. Secret keys: non-prefixed env vars in API routes only

User: "How do I load data for a page in Expo Router?" -> See references/expo-router-loaders.md for route-level loaders (web, SDK 55+). For native, use React Query or fetch.

Files4
4 files · 12.5 KB

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Overall Score

83/100

Grade

B

Good

Safety

82

Quality

86

Clarity

84

Completeness

78

Summary

This skill teaches developers how to implement network requests, data fetching, caching, authentication, and offline support in Expo apps using the fetch API, React Query, and Expo Router loaders. It provides structured guidance on common patterns including error handling, token management, environment-based API configuration, and request cancellation.

Static Analysis Findings

1 finding

Patterns detected by deterministic static analysis before AI scoring. Hover over any finding code for detailed information and remediation guidance.

Credential Exposure
SEC-020Direct .env File Access14x in 2 files

Direct .env file access

SKILL.md.env12x
references/expo-router-loaders.md.env2x

Detected Capabilities

file readenvironment variable readenvironment variable referenceHTTP request (example URLs)code pattern guidance

Trigger Keywords

Phrases that MCP clients use to match this skill to user intent.

api requests expodata fetching react nativeoffline support mobileauthentication tokens expoenvironment api configreact query setupexpo router loaders

Risk Signals

INFO

Direct .env file access referenced in documentation

SKILL.md, multiple sections
INFO

.env file access in loaders example

references/expo-router-loaders.md

Referenced Domains

External domains referenced in skill content, detected by static analysis.

api.example.comapi.production.comapi.stripe.comlocalhost

Use Cases

  • Implementing and debugging API requests in Expo applications
  • Setting up React Query or SWR for data fetching and caching
  • Configuring authentication with token storage and refresh flows
  • Building offline-first features with NetInfo and React Query persistence
  • Loading data at the route level using Expo Router loaders (web SDK 55+)
  • Handling environment-specific API URLs across development and production
  • Implementing proper error handling and retry logic for network requests

Quality Notes

  • Excellent structure with clear decision tree matching common user questions to solutions
  • Comprehensive example code covering fetch, React Query, error handling, authentication, and offline scenarios
  • Well-organized sections with progressive complexity from basic fetch to advanced patterns
  • Good security guidance on token storage (recommends SecureStore vs AsyncStorage) and environment variable safety (EXPO_PUBLIC_ prefix warning)
  • Clear distinction between client-side and server-side secrets with specific guidance on where to store each
  • References to external documentation are present and files exist in the directory
  • Practical 'Common Mistakes' section highlights security pitfalls with correct alternatives
  • Good coverage of Expo-specific features (SecureStore, Expo Router loaders)
  • Strong emphasis on proper error handling patterns throughout
Model: claude-haiku-4-5-20251001Analyzed: Jul 11, 2026

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