What is mobx-react?
The mobx-react package provides React bindings for MobX, a state management library. It allows you to connect your React components to MobX observables, making it easier to manage and react to state changes in your application.
What are mobx-react's main functionalities?
Observer Component
The observer function is used to create a reactive component that will automatically re-render when the observed state changes.
import React from 'react';
import { observer } from 'mobx-react';
import { observable } from 'mobx';
const appState = observable({
count: 0
});
const Counter = observer(() => (
<div>
<button onClick={() => appState.count++}>Increment</button>
<p>{appState.count}</p>
</div>
));
export default Counter;
Injecting Stores
The inject function is used to inject stores into components, making it easier to access MobX stores within your React components.
import React from 'react';
import { Provider, inject, observer } from 'mobx-react';
import { observable } from 'mobx';
class Store {
@observable count = 0;
}
const store = new Store();
const Counter = inject('store')(observer(({ store }) => (
<div>
<button onClick={() => store.count++}>Increment</button>
<p>{store.count}</p>
</div>
)));
const App = () => (
<Provider store={store}>
<Counter />
</Provider>
);
export default App;
Using MobX with React Hooks
The useLocalObservable hook is used to create local observable state within a functional component, allowing you to use MobX with React hooks.
import React from 'react';
import { useLocalObservable, observer } from 'mobx-react';
const Counter = observer(() => {
const state = useLocalObservable(() => ({
count: 0,
increment() {
this.count++;
}
}));
return (
<div>
<button onClick={state.increment}>Increment</button>
<p>{state.count}</p>
</div>
);
});
export default Counter;
Other packages similar to mobx-react
redux
Redux is a popular state management library for JavaScript applications. Unlike MobX, which uses observables and decorators, Redux relies on a single immutable state tree and pure reducer functions to manage state. Redux is often used with the react-redux bindings to connect React components to the Redux store.
recoil
Recoil is a state management library for React that provides a more fine-grained approach to state management compared to Redux. It allows you to create atoms and selectors to manage state and derive state. Recoil is designed to work seamlessly with React's concurrent mode and hooks.
zustand
Zustand is a small, fast, and scalable state management library for React. It uses hooks to create and manage state, providing a simple and intuitive API. Unlike MobX, which uses observables, Zustand relies on React's built-in state management capabilities.
mobx-react
Package with react component wrapper for combining React with mobx.
Exports the observer
decorator and some development utilities.
For documentation, see the mobx project.
This package supports both React and React-Native.
Installation
npm install mobx-react --save
import {observer} from 'mobx-react';
import {observer} from 'mobx-react/native';
This package provides the bindings for MobX and React.
See the official documentation for how to get started.
Boilerplate projects that use mobx-react
- Minimal MobX, React, ES6, JSX, Hot reloading: MobX-React-Boilerplate
- TodoMVC MobX, React, ES6, JSX, Hot reloading: MobX-React-TodoMVC
- Minimal MobX, React, Typescript, TSX: MobX-React-Typescript
- Minimal MobX, React, ES6(babel), JSPM with hot reloading modules:
jspm-react
- React-Native Counter: Mobservable-React-Native-Counter
API documentation
observer(componentClass)
Function (and decorator) that converts a React component definition, React component class or stand-alone render function into a reactive component.
See the mobx documentation for more details.
trackComponents()
Enables the tracking from components. Each rendered reactive component will be added to the componentByNodeRegistery
and its renderings will be reported through the renderReporter
event emitter.
renderReporter
Event emitter that reports render timings and component destructions. Only available after invoking trackComponents()
.
New listeners can be added through renderReporter.on(function(data) { /* */ })
.
Data will have one of the following formats:
{
event: 'render',
renderTime: ,
totalTime: ,
component: ,
node:
}
{
event: 'destroy',
component: ,
node:
}
componentByNodeRegistery
WeakMap. It's get
function returns the associated reactive component of the given node. The node needs to be precisely the root node of the component.
This map is only available after invoking trackComponents
.
Changelog
2.1.5
Improved typescript typings overloads of observer
2.1.4
Added empty 'dependencies' section to package.json, fixes #26
2.1.3
Added support for context to stateless components. (by Kosta-Github).
2.1.1
Fixed #12: fixed React warning when a component was unmounted after scheduling a re-render but before executing it.
2.1.0
Upped dependency of mobx to 1.1.1.
2.0.1
It is now possible to define propTypes
and getDefaultProps
on a stateless component:
const myComponent = (props) => {
};
myComponent.propTypes = {
name: React.PropTypes.string
};
myComponent.defaultProps = {
name: "World"
};
export default observer(myComponent);
All credits to Jiri Spac for this contribution!
2.0.0
Use React 0.14 instead of React 0.13. For React 0.13, use version mobx-react@1.0.2
or higher.
1.0.2
Minor fixes and improvements
1.0.1
Fixed issue with typescript typings. An example project with MobX, React, Typescript, TSX can be found here: https://github.com/mobxjs/mobx-react-typescript
1.0.0
reactiveComponent
has been renamed to observer
0.2.3
Added separte import for react-native: use var reactiveComponent = require('mobx-react/native').reactiveComponent
for native support; webpack clients will refuse to build otherwise.
0.2.2
Added react-native as dependency, so that the package works with either react
or react-native
.
0.2.0
Upgraded to MobX 0.7.0
0.1.7
Fixed issue where Babel generated component classes where not properly picked up.
0.1.6
observer
now accepts a pure render function as argument, besides constructor function. For example:
var TodoItem = observer(function TodoItem(props) {
var todo = props.todo;
return <li>{todo.task}</li>;
});
0.1.5
observer is now defined in terms of side effects.
0.1.4
Added support for React 0.14(RC) by dropping peer dependency