drichard / react-sweet-state

Shared state management solution for React

Home Page:https://atlassian.github.io/react-sweet-state/

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react-sweet-state

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The good parts of Redux and React Context in a flexible, scalable and easy to use state management solution

Philosophy

sweet-state is heavily inspired by Redux mixed with Context API concepts. It has render-prop components or hooks, connected to Store instances (defined as actions and initial state), receiving the Store state (or part of it) and the actions as a result.

Each Subscriber, or Hook, is responsible to get the instantiated Store (creating a new one with initialState if necessary), allowing sharing state across you project extremely easy.

Similar to Redux thunks, actions receive a set of arguments to get and mutate the state. The default setState implementation is similar to React setState, accepting an object that will be shallow merged with the current state. However you are free to replace the built in setState logic with custom, like immer for instance.

Basic usage

npm i react-sweet-state
# or
yarn add react-sweet-state

Creating a Subscriber

import { createStore, createSubscriber, createHook } from 'react-sweet-state';

const Store = createStore({
  // value of the store on initialisation
  initialState: {
    count: 0,
  },
  // actions that trigger store mutation
  actions: {
    increment: (by = 1) => ({ setState, getState }) => {
      // mutate state synchronously
      setState({
        count: getState().count + by,
      });
    },
  },
  // optional, mostly used for easy debugging
  name: 'counter',
});

const CounterSubscriber = createSubscriber(Store);
// or
const useCounter = createHook(Store);
// app.js
import { CounterSubscriber } from './components/counter';

const App = () => (
  <div>
    <h1>My counter</h1>
    <CounterSubscriber>
      {/* Store state is the first argument and actions are the second one */}
      {(state, actions) => (
        <div>
          {state.count}
          <button onClick={actions.increment}>+</button>
        </div>
      )}
    </CounterSubscriber>
  </div>
);

Documentation

Check the docs website
or the docs folder.

Examples

See sweet-state in action: run npm run start and then go and check each folder:

  • Basic example with Flow typing http://localhost:8080/basic-flow/
  • Advanced async example with Flow typing http://localhost:8080/advanced-flow/
  • Advanced scoped example with Flow typing http://localhost:8080/advanced-scoped-flow/

Contributing

To test your changes you can run the examples (with npm run start). Also, make sure you run npm run preversion before creating you PR so you will double check that linting, types and tests are fine.

Thanks

This library merges ideas from redux, react-redux, redux-thunk, react-copy-write, unstated, bey, react-apollo just to name a few. Moreover it has been the result of months of discussions with ferborva, pksjce, TimeRaider, dpisani, JedWatson, and other devs at Atlassian.

About

Shared state management solution for React

https://atlassian.github.io/react-sweet-state/

License:MIT License


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