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immer-wieder's Introduction

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immer-wieder is an api-compatible wrap around Reacts context, behaving the same way with the distinction that you can

  1. provide actions
  2. mutate state directly instead of writing reducers (it's using immer)
  3. optionally select state, so that components only render when the state they subscribe to changes

If you look at the code it should become clear that it lets React do all the work in order to create as little surface for maintenance and bugs as possible.

Install

npm install immer-wieder

Import

import createContext from 'immer-wieder'

Create context

const { Provider, Consumer } = createContext((setState, getState) => ({
  // Everything in here is your state
  bands: {
    0: { name: 'Flipper' },
    1: { name: 'Melt Banana' },
  },
  ids: [0, 1],
  // Including actions, which you can wrap and nest, makes it easier to access them later ...
  someActions: {
    // Actions do not have to mutate state at all, use getState to access current state
    cacheState: id => getState(state => fetch(`/backend?cache=${state.stringify()}`),
    // Actions can be async naturally
    fetchState: async () => {
      try {
        const res = await fetch(`/backend?state`)
        setState(await res.json())
      } catch(error) {
        setState({ error })
      }
    },
    // Otherwise setState behaves like always
    removeAll: () => setState({ bands: {}, ids: [] }),
    // With the distinction that you mutate drafts, thanks to immer
    changeName: (id, name) =>
      setState(state => {
        // You are allowed to mutate state in here ...
        state.bands[id].name = name
        // Or return a reduced shallow clone of state like always
        // return { ...state, users: { ...state.users, [id]: { ...state.users[id], name } } }
      }),
  },
}))

Provide once, then consume, anywhere within the providers tree

const App = () => (
  // Provide state, everything withing can have selective access to it
  <Provider>
    <Consumer select={store => store.ids}>
      {ids => ids.map(id => <EditDetails key={id} id={id} />)}
    </Consumer>
  </Provider>
)

const EditDetails = ({ id }) => (
  // Select is optional, if present the component renders only when the state you select changes
  // Actions can be fetched right from the store
  <Consumer select={store => ({ ...store.bands[id], ...store.someActions })}>
    {({ name, changeName }) => (
      <div>
        <h1>{name}</h1>
        <input value={name} onChange={e => changeName(id, e.target.value)} />
      </div>
    )}
  </Consumer>
)

Demo: Provider & Consumer

Inline mutations using void

Draft mutations usually warrant a code block, since a return denotes a overwrite in immer. Sometimes that can stretch code a little more than you might be comfortable with. In such cases you can use javascripts void operator, which evaluates expressions and returns undefined.

// Single mutation
setState(state => void (state.user.age += 1))

// Multiple mutations
setState(state => void (state.user.age += 1, state.user.height = 186))

What about HOCs?

Sometimes you need to access state in lifecycles or maybe you just don't like render props at all.

import createContext from 'immer-wieder'

const { Provider, hoc } = createContext((setState, getState) => ({ ... }))

@hoc((store, props) => ({ item: store.items[props.id] }))
class Item extends Component {
  render() {
    return <div>{this.props.item}</div>
  }
}

const App = () => (
  <Provider>
    <Item id={1} />
  </Provider>
)

Contributions

All my open source projects are done in my free time, if you like any of them, consider helping out, all contributions are welcome as well as donations, for instance through Patreon.

immer-wieder's People

Contributors

drcmda avatar giannif avatar slikts avatar

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immer-wieder's Issues

Is the library Production ready?

Hi

Would you consider this llibrary production ready? eg. have you used it in any bigger application?

I also see you have react-contextual, would that be a better choice in your opinion?

Thanks in advanced.

Kind regards
Dennis

Is this intentional or a typo?

src/index.js

componentDidMount() {
  this.mounted = true
}
componentWillUnmount() {
  this.mounted = true
}

I would have thought you set it false for unmount so no batched setState calls attempt to run on the unmounted component.

If it's intentional, could you explain briefly what's going on?

Seeking ideas for implementing history

Hi, thanks for the great lib, I'm really enjoying working with it so far.

I'm wondering if you have any suggestions for how I can implement history in my store. I'm struggling to grasp it because the store is only accessible as a draft inside setState, which is always going to be mutated, so as far as I can understand I can only ever do something like draft.history.push( draft ) or draft.history.push( draft.someProp ) within some existing action. Would that make sense? And then could I later even revert to it doing draft = draft.history.pop() or something along those lines?

I haven't really interacted directly with immer (only learned about it through your lib), but obviously draft is not a POJO. Should I look there? Is Middleware the right usecase for this? I'm really not sure...

Anyway I'm going to start trying various approaches and I'd greatly appreciate any insights you can provide to be able to wrap my head around this. Thanks!

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