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@cerebral/react

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@cerebral/react

React view for Cerebral

  • 3.0.0-1513583790211
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Maintainers
5
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Source

@cerebral/react

React view for Cerebral.

Install

npm install @cerebral/react react react-dom babel-preset-react

Container

import React from 'react'
import {render} from 'react-dom'
import {Controller} from 'cerebral'
import {Container} from '@cerebral/react'
import App from './App'

const controller = Controller({
  state: {
    foo: 'bar'
  },
  signals: {
    clicked: []
  }
})

render((
  <Container controller={controller}>
    <App />
  </Container>
), document.querySelector('#app'))

connect

Typically you add a stateless component:

import React from 'react'
import {state, signal} from 'cerebral/tags'
import {connect} from '@cerebral/react'

export default connect({
  foo: state`foo`,
  click: signal`clicked`
},
  function MyComponent ({foo, click}) {
    return <div onClick={() => click()}>{foo}</div>
  }
)

But you can also use stateful components:

import React from 'react'
import {state, signal} from 'cerebral/tags'
import {connect} from '@cerebral/react'

export default connect({
  foo: state`foo`,
  click: signal`clicked`
},
  class MyComponent extends React.Component {
    render () {
      return <div onClick={() => this.props.click()}>{this.props.foo}</div>
    }
  }
)

You can add an additional function to connect that gives you full control of properties of the component and dependencies. The returned object from this function will be the exact props passed into the component.

import React from 'react'
import {signal, state} from 'cerebral/tags'
import {connect} from '@cerebral/react'

export default connect({
  foo: state`app.foo`,
  clicked: signal`app.somethingClicked`
}, (dependencyProps, ownProps, resolve) => {
  // we can resolve values or path here. Note: it's not tracked as dependency
  const path = resolve.path(state`entities.foo.{ownProps}`)

  return {
    // values from state could be transformed here
    foo: `Label: ${foo}`,                       
    // signals calls could be bound here, so component uses it as general callback            
    onClick: (e) => clicked({ id: ownProps.id })
  }
},
  function App({foo, onClick}) {
    return <div onClick={onClick}>{foo}</div>
  }
)
  • dependencyProps are the props you connected.

  • props are the props passed into the component by the parent.

  • resolve allows you to resolve computed etc., just like resolve in actions.

TypeScript

If you use TypeScript, you can type your component props with connect:

import React from 'react'
import {state, signal} from 'cerebral/tags'
import {connect} from '@cerebral/react'

// connected props
interface Props {
  click (): void
  foo: string
}

// component props such as <MyComponent name='foobar' />
interface EProps {
  name: string
}

// Stateless
export default connect<Props, EProps>({
  foo: state`foo`,
  click: signal`clicked`
},
  // TypeScript now knows about foo and click props
  function MyComponent ({foo, click}) {
    return <div onClick={() => click()}>{foo}</div>
  }
)

// Stateful
export default connect<Props, EProps>({
  foo: state`foo`,
  click: signal`clicked`
},
  class MyComponent extends React.Component<Props, EProps> {
    render () {
      return <div onClick={() => this.props.click()}>{this.props.foo}</div>
    }
  }
)

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Package last updated on 18 Dec 2017

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