
Research
/Security News
9 Malicious NuGet Packages Deliver Time-Delayed Destructive Payloads
Socket researchers discovered nine malicious NuGet packages that use time-delayed payloads to crash applications and corrupt industrial control systems.
@semantic-ui/reactivity
Advanced tools
This is a paired down signal/reactivity library loosely inspired by [Tracker](https://github.com/meteor/meteor/tree/devel/packages/tracker) from [Meteor JS](https://github.com/meteor/meteor/). It is used to control reactive updates from Semantic and is bu
This is a paired down signal/reactivity library loosely inspired by Tracker from Meteor JS. It is used to control reactive updates from Semantic and is built into its templating system.
ReactiveVar lets you define a variable which will trigger any Reaction or functions called by a reaction to retrigger when it is modified.
Reaction is a reactive context, this will rerun when referenced reactive values are modified.
Reactions are enqueued and then flushed using the microtask queue
You can create a reaction by simply creating a variable then modifying its value.
import { ReactiveVar, Reaction } from '@semantic-ui/reactivity';
let reactiveValue = new ReactiveVar('first');
Reaction.create(computation => {
console.log(reactiveValue.get());
});
// equivalent ways to set value
saying.value = 'second' // option 1
saying.set('second'); // option 2
// outputs first, second
Any computation will receive itself as the first parameter of its callback, which you use to do things like check if its the firstRun or call stop() to stop the computation.
import { ReactiveVar, Reaction } from '@semantic-ui/reactivity';
let saying = new ReactiveVar('hello');
Reaction.create(comp => {
if(comp.firstRun) {
console.log('First run!');
}
// stop computation if value is set to goodbye
if(saying.value == 'goodbye') {
comp.stop();
}
});
saying.set('goodbye');
When declaring a reactive variable you can pass in an equality function that will be used to determine if calculations should be rerun when the value is updated. The default function is isEqual from utils which will handle most common cases like dates, binary data and deep object equality.
Objects
let obj1 = { name: 'Sally', age: 22 };
let obj2 = { name: 'Sally', age: 22 };
let reactiveObj = new ReactiveVar(obj1);
Reaction.create(comp => {
console.log(reactiveObj.get());
});
reactiveObj.set(obj2);
// outputs {name: 'Sally', age: 22}
let obj1 = { name: 'Sally', age: 22 };
let obj2 = { name: 'Sally', age: 23 };
let reactiveObj = new ReactiveVar(obj1);
Reaction.create(comp => {
console.log(reactiveObj.get());
});
reactiveObj.set(obj2);
// outputs {name: 'Sally', age: 22}
// outputs {name: 'Sally', age: 23}
// always rerun
const customIsEqual = (a, b) => {
return false;
}
let reactiveObj = new ReactiveVar({ name: 'Sally', age: 22 }, customIsEqual);
Reaction.create(comp => {
const obj = reactiveObj.get();
console.log('Log');
});
reactiveObj.set(reactiveObj.get());
// log runs twice
You can use the set helper to declaratively update values like arrays and objects, which would not normally trigger reactivity if you simply modify their value.
Objects
import { ReactiveVar, Reaction } from '@semantic-ui/reactivity';
let person = {
name: 'Jack',
age: 32,
}
let reactivePerson = new ReactiveVar(person);
Reaction.create(comp => {
console.log(reactivePerson.get().name);
});
person.name = 'Jill';
reactivePerson.set(person);
// outputs Jack, Jill
Arrays
let rows = [
{ name: 'Sally', age: 22 },
{ name: 'Jack', age: 32 }
];
let reactiveRows = new ReactiveVar(rows);
Reaction.create(comp => {
console.log(reactiveRows.get().length);
});
rows.pop();
reactiveRows.set(rows);
// outputs 2, 1
const numbers = new ReactiveVar([10, 20, 30]);
// Add an item to the end
numbers.push(40);
// 10, 20, 30, 40
numbers.unshift(0);
// 0, 10, 20, 30, 40
numbers.splice(0, 2);
// 0, 10
numbers.setIndex(1, 99);
// 0, 99
numbers.removeIndex(1);
// 0
Boolean helpers allow you to toggle the state of a ReactiveVar that holds a boolean value.
const isToggled = new ReactiveVar(false);
// Toggle the boolean value
isToggled.toggle();
console.log('Value is now true');
isToggled.toggle();
console.log('Value is now false again');
You can use firstRun to determine if this calculation is running from an initial value being set. Keep in mind though if you leave the function early on first run it will never set up a reactive reference to unreachable code.
import { ReactiveVar, Reaction } from '@semantic-ui/reactivity';
let saying = new ReactiveVar('hello');
Reaction.create(comp => {
if(comp.firstRun) {
return;
}
let saying = saying.get();
console.log(saying);
// outputs nothing (early termination on first run prevents reactive var from being referenced)
});
Reaction.create(comp => {
let saying = saying.get();
if(comp.firstRun) {
return;
}
console.log(saying);
// outputs goodbye
});
saying.set('goodbye');
You can help fine-tune reactivity by using guard to only pay attention to certain parts of a reactive context
const userAge = new ReactiveVar(30);
const userName = new ReactiveVar('John Doe');
const lastUpdated = new ReactiveVar(new Date()); // Assume this updates frequently
const getUserInfo = () => {
return {
name: userName,
age: userAge,
date: lastUpdated,
};
};
Reaction.create((comp) => {
Reaction.guard(() => {
let user = getUserInfo(); // we only want to call this function if name/age changes
return {
name: user.name,
age: user.age,
};
});
if(!comp.firstRun) {
console.log(`User Info Updated: Name: ${userInfo.name}, Age: ${userInfo.age}`);
}
// Simulate updates
setTimeout(() => {
userName.value = 'Jane Doe'; // This should trigger the reaction
}, 300);
setTimeout(() => {
userAge.value = 31; // This should also trigger the reaction
}, 1000);
setTimeout(() => {
lastUpdated.value = new Date(); // This should NOT trigger the reaction
}, 2000);
});
To get the current value of a ReactiveVar without establishing a reactive dependency, use the peek() method. This is particularly useful when you need to access the value for read-only purposes outside of a reactive computation and do not want to trigger reactivity.
const counter = new ReactiveVar(10);
// Access the value without triggering reactivity
const currentValue = counter.peek();
console.log(`Current value without establishing dependency: ${currentValue}`);
The Reaction.nonreactive function allows you to perform computations or access reactive variables without establishing a reactive dependency. This is useful when you need to read from a reactive source but don't want the surrounding computation to re-run when the source changes.
const reactiveValue = new ReactiveVar('Initial Value');
// Perform a non-reactive read
Reaction.nonreactive(() => {
const value = reactiveValue.get();
console.log(`Read inside nonreactive: ${value}`);
});
reactiveValue.set('Updated Value'); // Does not trigger the console.log inside nonreactive
When a ReactiveVar updates an update is enqueued and flushes asynchronously when the microtask queue is processed. This means that intermediary values will not be processed when updating code in a loop.
You can trigger the queue to be immediately flushed to prevent this by using the Reaction.flush() helper.
import { ReactiveVar, Reaction } from '@semantic-ui/reactivity';
let number = new ReactiveVar(1);
Reaction.create(comp => {
console.log(number.get());
});
[1,2,3,4,5].forEach(value => number.set(value));
let number = new ReactiveVar(1);
Reaction.create(comp => {
console.log(number.get());
});
[1,2,3,4,5].forEach(value => {
number.set(value);
Reaction.flush();
});
// outputs 1,2,3,4,5
You can access the current computation either using the returned value from create or as the first parameter of the callback.
This can be helpful to inspect the listeners or to stop the computation using the stop method.
import { ReactiveVar, Reaction } from '@semantic-ui/reactivity';
let number = new ReactiveVar(1);
Reaction.create(comp => {
if(number.get() > 3) {
comp.stop();
return;
}
console.log(number.get());
});
let comp = Reaction.create(() => {
if(number.get() > 3) {
comp.stop();
return;
}
console.log(number.get());
});
[1,2,3,4,5].forEach(value => {
number.set(value);
Reaction.flush();
});
// both output 1,2,3
ReactiveVar includes a couple helpers numbers
let count = new ReactiveVar(0);
count.increment(); // set to 1
let count = new ReactiveVar(0);
count.increment(2); // set to 2
let count = new ReactiveVar(2);
count.decrement(); // set to 1
let count = new ReactiveVar(0);
count.decrement(2); // set to 1
ReactiveVar includes a helper to make dates asier
let date = new ReactiveVar(new Date()); // initializes as now
setTimeout(() => {
date.now(); // now 1 second later
}, 1000);
ReactiveVar includes a few helpers for some of the most common usecases for manipulating arrays
let items = new ReactiveVar([0,1,2]);
items.removeIndex(1); // outputs 0, 2
let items = new ReactiveVar([0,2,2]);
items.setIndex(1); // outputs 0, 1, 2
let items = new ReactiveVar([0,1,2]);
items.unshift(); // outputs 1, 2
let items = new ReactiveVar([0,1,2]);
items.push(3); // outputs 0, 1, 2, 3
ReactiveVar provides several helpers for manipulating arrays of objects a common data structure when handling structured data.
const tasks = new ReactiveVar([
{ _id: 'task1_uuid', task: 'Implement feature', completed: true }
{ _id: 'task2_uuid', task: 'Write Tests', completed: true }
{ _id: 'task3_uuid', task: 'Write documentation', completed: false },
]);
// sets 'write documentation' to complete
tasks.setProperty('task3_uuid', 'completed', true);
// replaces task 1 with new task
const newTask = { _id: 'tasks1_uuid', task: 'Reimplement feature', completed: false };
tasks.replaceItem('task1_uuid', newTask)
// gets index of id
const index = tasks.getIndex('tasks1_uuid')
// gets id from an item
const id = tasks.getID(tasks.get()[0])
// remove task 2 from list
tasks.removeItem('tasks2_uuid')
FAQs
A signals based reactive state management system
We found that @semantic-ui/reactivity demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Research
/Security News
Socket researchers discovered nine malicious NuGet packages that use time-delayed payloads to crash applications and corrupt industrial control systems.

Security News
Socket CTO Ahmad Nassri discusses why supply chain attacks now target developer machines and what AI means for the future of enterprise security.

Security News
Learn the essential steps every developer should take to stay secure on npm and reduce exposure to supply chain attacks.