API Reference
Tweet
import { Tweet } from 'react-tweet'<Tweet id="1629307668568633344">Fetches and renders the tweet. It accepts the following props:
- id -
string: the tweet ID. For example inhttps://twitter.com/chibicode/status/1629307668568633344the tweet ID is1629307668568633344. This is the only required prop. - apiUrl -
string: the API URL to fetch the tweet from when using the tweet client-side with SWR. Defaults tohttps://react-tweet.vercel.app/api/tweet/:id. - fallback -
ReactNode: The fallback component to render while the tweet is loading. Defaults toTweetSkeleton. - onError -
(error?: any) => any: The returned error will be sent to theTweetNotFoundcomponent. - components -
TwitterComponents: Components to replace the default tweet components. See the custom tweet components section for more details. - fetchOptions -
RequestInit: options to pass tofetch(opens in a new tab).
If the environment where Tweet is used does not support React Server Components then it will work with SWR (opens in a new tab) instead and the tweet will be fetched from https://react-tweet.vercel.app/api/tweet/:id, which is CORS friendly.
We highly recommend adding your own API route to fetch the tweet in production (as we cannot guarantee our IP will not get limited). You can do it by using the apiUrl prop:
<Tweet apiUrl={id && `/api/tweet/${id}`} />Note:
apiUrldoes nothing if the Tweet is rendered in a server component because it can fetch directly from Twitter's CDN.
Here's a good example of how to setup your own API route:
import type { VercelRequest, VercelResponse } from '@vercel/node'
import { getTweet } from 'react-tweet/api'
const handler = async (req: VercelRequest, res: VercelResponse) => {
const tweetId = req.query.tweet
if (req.method !== 'GET' || typeof tweetId !== 'string') {
res.status(400).json({ error: 'Bad Request.' })
return
}
try {
const tweet = await getTweet(tweetId)
res.status(tweet ? 200 : 404).json({ data: tweet ?? null })
} catch (error) {
console.error(error)
res.status(400).json({ error: error.message ?? 'Bad request.' })
}
}
export default handlerSomething similar can be done with Next.js API Routes or Route Handlers.
EmbeddedTweet
import { EmbeddedTweet } from 'react-tweet'Renders a tweet. It accepts the following props:
- tweet -
Tweet: the tweet data, as returned bygetTweet. Required. - components -
TwitterComponents: Components to replace the default tweet components. See the custom tweet components section for more details.
TweetSkeleton
import { TweetSkeleton } from 'react-tweet'A tweet skeleton useful for loading states.
TweetNotFound
import { TweetNotFound } from 'react-tweet'A tweet not found component. It accepts the following props:
- error -
any: the error that was thrown when fetching the tweet. Not required.
Custom tweet components
Default components used by Tweet and EmbeddedTweet can be replaced by passing a components prop. It extends the TwitterComponents type exported from react-tweet:
type TwitterComponents = {
TweetNotFound?: (props: Props) => JSX.Element
AvatarImg?: (props: AvatarImgProps) => JSX.Element
MediaImg?: (props: MediaImgProps) => JSX.Element
}For example, to replace the default img tag used for the avatar and media with next/image you can do the following:
// tweet-components.tsx
import Image from 'next/image'
import type { TwitterComponents } from 'react-tweet'
export const components: TwitterComponents = {
AvatarImg: (props) => <Image {...props} />,
MediaImg: (props) => <Image {...props} fill unoptimized />,
}And then pass the components to Tweet or EmbeddedTweet:
import { components } from './tweet-components'
const MyTweet = ({ id }: { id: string }) => (
<Tweet id={id} components={components} />
)