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mini-store

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mini-store

Travis

A state store for React component.

Motivation

When you want to share a component's state to another one, a commom pattern in React world is lifting state up. But one problem of this pattern is performance, assume we have a component in following hierarchy:

<Parent>
  <ChildA />
  <ChildB />
  <ChildC />
</Parent>

ChildA want to share state with ChildB, so you lifting ChildA's state up to Parent. Now, when ChildA's state changes, the whole Parent will rerender, includes ChildC which should not happen.

Redux do a good job at this situation throgh keeping all state in store, then component can subscribe state's changes, and only connected components will rerender. But redux + react-redux is overkill when you are writing a component library. So I wrote this little library, It's like Redux's store without "reducer" and "dispatch".

Example

See this demo online.

import { Provider, create, connect } from 'mini-store';

class Counter extends React.Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);

    this.store = create({
      count: 0,
    });
  }

  render() {
    return (
      <Provider store={this.store}>
        <div>
          <Buttons />
          <Result />
        </div>
      </Provider>
    )
  }
}

@connect()
class Buttons extends React.Component {
  handleClick = (step) => () => {
    const { store } = this.props;
    const { count } = store.getState();
    store.setState({ count: count + step });
  }

  render() {
    return (
      <div>
        <button onClick={this.handleClick(1)}>+</button>
        <button onClick={this.handleClick(-1)}>-</button>
      </div>
    );
  }
}

@connect((state) => ({ count: state.count }))
class Result extends React.Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <div>{this.props.count}</div>
    );
  };
}

API

create(initialState)

Creates a store that holds the state. initialState is plain object.

<Provider store>

Makes the store available to the connect() calls in the component hierarchy below.

connect(mapStateToProps)

Connects a React component to the store. It works like Redux's connect, but only accept mapStateToProps. The connected component also receive store as a prop, you can call setState directly on store.

License

MIT

FAQs

Package last updated on 12 Oct 2018

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