
Security News
TypeScript is Porting Its Compiler to Go for 10x Faster Builds
TypeScript is porting its compiler to Go, delivering 10x faster builds, lower memory usage, and improved editor performance for a smoother developer experience.
horizon-react-extend
Advanced tools
React bindings for rethinkdb/horizon. This package just fork from react-horizon, only adding a update method to previous package.
npm i -S horizon-react-extend
Currently, horizon-react exports two enhancers.
Similarly to react-redux, you'll have to first wrap a root component with a
Connector
which will initialize the horizon instance and then subscribe to
data by using subscribe
.
Example Root component:
import { Connector } from 'horizon-react';
import store from './store';
import TodoList from './components/TodoList';
// If you don't pass a horizon client instance, Connector will
// automatically create one for you
export default () => (
<Connector store={store}>
<TodoList />
</Connector>
);
// if you pass a horizon client instance, you have to .connect() before
// you pass the instance to Connector
export default () => (
<Connector store={store} horizon={horizon}>
<TodoList />
</Connector>
);
Example Subscribed component:
import { subscribe } from 'horizon-react';
import Todo from './Todo';
// simple subscription to the collection "todos"
const mapDataToProps = {
todos: (hz) => hz('todos')
};
const TodoList = (props) => (
<ul>
{props.todos.map( todo => <Todo {...todo} /> )}
</ul>
);
export default subscribe({
mapDataToProps
})(TodoList)
Advanced Subscribed component:
import { subscribe } from 'horizon-react';
import Todo from './Todo';
// simple subscription to the collection "todos"
const mapDataToProps = {
todos: (hz, props) => hz('todos').limit(props.limit)
};
// you can connect to redux state too
const mapStateToProps = (state, props) => ({
ui: state.checkedTodos
});
const TodoList = (props) => (
<ul>
{props.todos.map( todo => <Todo {...todo} /> )}
</ul>
);
export default subscribe({
mapDataToProps,
mapStateToProps
})(TodoList)
It should! If not, please create a new issue!
Yes, you can either directly use context
to access .horizon or just use subscribe()(MyComponent)
. subscribe
will pass the Horizon instance from the context down to your component as a prop horizon
.
Example:
import { subscribe } from 'horizon-react';
const AddTodoButton = (props) => (
<button onClick={() => {
props.horizon('todos').store({ text: 'A new todo item.' });
}}>
Add a todo item.
</button>
);
export default subscribe()(AddTodoButton);
Pull Requests are very welcome!
If you find any issues, please report them via Github Issues!
(MIT)
FAQs
React bindings for horizon, fork from package horizon-react
We found that horizon-react-extend demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released 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.
Security News
TypeScript is porting its compiler to Go, delivering 10x faster builds, lower memory usage, and improved editor performance for a smoother developer experience.
Research
Security News
The Socket Research Team has discovered six new malicious npm packages linked to North Korea’s Lazarus Group, designed to steal credentials and deploy backdoors.
Security News
Socket CEO Feross Aboukhadijeh discusses the open web, open source security, and how Socket tackles software supply chain attacks on The Pair Program podcast.