ReduxConnect for React Router

How do you usually request data and store it to redux state?
You create actions that do async jobs to load data, create reducer to save this data to redux state,
then connect data to your component or container.
Usually it's very similar routine tasks.
Also, usually we want data to be preloaded. Especially if you're building universal app,
or you just want pages to be solid, don't jump when data was loaded.
This package consist of 2 parts: one part allows you to delay containers rendering until some async actions are happening.
Another stores your data to redux state and connect your loaded data to your container.
Notice
This is a fork and refactor of redux-async-connect
Installation & Usage
Using npm:
$ npm install redux-connect -S
import { Router, browserHistory } from 'react-router';
import { ReduxAsyncConnect, asyncConnect, reducer as reduxAsyncConnect } from 'redux-connect'
import React from 'react'
import { render } from 'react-dom'
import { createStore, combineReducers } from 'redux';
@asyncConnect([{
key: 'lunch',
promise: ({ params, helpers }) => Promise.resolve({ id: 1, name: 'Borsch' })
}])
class App extends React.Component {
render() {
const lunch = this.props.lunch
return (
<div>{lunch.name}</div>
)
}
}
const store = createStore(combineReducers({ reduxAsyncConnect }), window.__data);
render((
<Provider store={store} key="provider">
<Router render={(props) => <ReduxAsyncConnect {...props}/>} history={browserHistory}>
<Route path="/" component={App}/>
</Router>
</Provider>
), el)
Server
import { renderToString } from 'react-dom/server'
import { match, RoutingContext } from 'react-router'
import { ReduxAsyncConnect, loadOnServer, reducer as reduxAsyncConnect } from 'redux-connect'
import createHistory from 'history/lib/createMemoryHistory';
import { Provider } from 'react-redux';
import { createStore, combineReducers } from 'redux';
app.get('*', (req, res) => {
const store = createStore(combineReducers({ reduxAsyncConnect }));
match({ routes, location: req.url }, (err, redirect, renderProps) => {
loadOnServer({ ...renderProps, store }).then(() => {
const appHTML = renderToString(
<Provider store={store} key="provider">
<ReduxAsyncConnect {...renderProps} />
</Provider>
)
const html = createPage(appHTML, store)
res.send(html)
})
})
})
function createPage(html, store) {
return `
<!doctype html>
<html>
<body>
<div id="app">${html}</div>
<!-- its a Redux initial data -->
<script dangerouslySetInnerHTML={{__html: `window.__data=${serialize(store.getState())};`}} charSet="UTF-8"/>
</body>
</html>
`
}
Usage with applyRouterMiddleware
Thanks to @mmahalwy for a good usage example
Pass custom render
method to ReduxAsyncConnect
, it can look like this:
const component = (
<Router
render={(props) => (
<ReduxAsyncConnect
{...props}
helpers={{ client }}
filter={item => !item.deferred}
render={applyRouterMiddleware(useScroll())}
/>
)}
history={history}
routes={getRoutes(store)}
/>
);
Basically what you do is instead of using render method like:
const render = props => <RouterContext {...props} />;
you use
const render = applyRouterMiddleware(...middleware);
Comparing with other libraries
There are some solutions of problem described above:
- AsyncProps
It solves the same problem, but it doesn't work with redux state. Also it's significantly more complex inside,
because it contains lots of logic to connect data to props.
It uses callbacks against promises...
- react-fetcher
It's very simple library too. But it provides you only interface for decorating your components and methods
to fetch data for them. It doesn't integrated with React Router or Redux. So, you need to write you custom logic
to delay routing transition for example.
- react-resolver
Works similar, but isn't integrated with redux.
Redux Connect uses awesome Redux to keep all fetched data in state.
This integration gives you agility:
- you can react on fetching actions like data loading or load success in your own reducers
- you can create own middleware to handle Redux Async Connect actions
- you can connect to loaded data anywhere else, just using simple redux @connect
- finally, you can debug and see your data using Redux Dev Tools
Also it's integrated with React Router to prevent routing transition
until data is loaded.
Contributors
Collaboration
You're welcome to PR, and we appreciate any questions or issues, please open an issue!