Lean Redux
Redux state like local component state.
Design
- Basic Redux state access and updating should be simple as it is with the
component local state
- No need to manually create action types or reducers
- The same API with React Components! Use
this.setState()
to update Redux state
- Redux state is be scoped to the components
- Component cannot interfere with parts of the state that do not belong to it
- Play well with other tools in the Redux community
- Time travel debuggers, state serialization tools, Redux Form etc. work well with Lean Redux
- You can drop this into your existing project and start using it only for
parts of the app
- Good performance
- Lean Redux is build on top of the new
connectAdvanced()
primitive of
React Redux 5.0 and implements the same optimizations as connect()
- Handlers are automatically bound to avoid some pure render anti-patterns
Example
import {connectLean} from "lean-redux";
var Counter = ({count, handleClick}) => (
<div>
{count} <button onClick={handleClick}>+1</button>
</div>
);
Counter = connectLean({
getInitialState() {
return {count: 0};
},
handleClick(e) {
e.preventDefault();
this.setState({count: this.state.count + 1});
},
})(Counter);
To learn more checkout the live examples.
Setup
npm install --save lean-redux
Just add the leanReducer
to your store and start creating components with
connectLean
.
import {createStore, applyMiddleware} from "redux";
import {Provider} from "react-redux";
import {leanReducer} from "lean-redux";
const store = createStore(leanReducer);
var Main = () => (
<Provider store={store}>
<Counter />
</Provider>
);
ReactDOM.render(<Main />, document.getElementById("app"));
If you already have other reducers you can merge leanReducer
into them with
the composeReducers
helper:
import {leanReducer, composeReducers} from "lean-redux";
const store = createStore(composeReducers(myReducer, myAnotherReducer, leanReducer));
Checkout the index.js in
examples
for complete example.
API
Functions exported by the lean-redux
module.
connectLean(options: Object): (component: ReactComponent) => ReactComponent
Connects a React component to a Redux store. Like connect()
in React Redux it
does not modify the component but returns a new one.
options
scope: string|Array|Function
Scope the component to a part of the Redux
state. Deep scopes can be defined with arrays. Missing path values in the
state will be automatically created as objects. If the value is a function it
should return the final scope. Parent component props are passed to the
function. If scope
is passed as a prop from the parent component it will
override the value defined here unless it's a function.getInitialState(): Object
Create default values for the scoped state. Like
React component getInitialState()
this is executed only once when the
component is mounted.mapState(state: Object, ownProps: Object): Object
Modify the state before
passing it to the wrapped component. Just like the mapStateToProps
in React
Redux, but the state is scoped according to the scope
option. If not
defined the default implementation is to return the props matching what
getInitialState()
returns.defaultProps: Object
Default props for the handler context.
Any other methods are considered to be "handlers" and are passed to the wrapped
component as props.
handlerContext
The context, this
, in the handlers is like in the React Components.
this.state: Object
The current scoped state from Reduxthis.props: Object
Props from defaultProps
and any additional props passed by
the parent component.this.setState(function|object nextState, [function callback])
Function to
update the scoped Redux state. The API is exactly the same with the React
Component setState()
.this.dispatch: Function
Redux store dispatch