redux-fluent
Tiny and eloquent way of bringing redux to the next level (~3K, typings included).
Try it out on RunKit (coming soon)
Motivations and Design Goals
Redux is great, every recent web application has most likely been built on top of it, and we can really make it better!
- Flux Standard Actions as a first class concept. FSA is a pretty common standard and we committed on following it to ensure interoperability.
- λ Go Functional, Everything is a function and reducers are built by function composition rather than piling up if and switch-case statements: Let's introduce Redux Fluent Reducers.
- Type Safety means great developer experience. That's what we had in mind while designing redux-fluent. Watch it yourself!
- Reducers at scale, due to being handling multiple actions, reducers tend to grow and become difficult to maintain: Let's introduce Redux Fluent Action Handlers.
- Less boilerplate, Flux architecture is usually verbose and some of their concepts, such as
Action
, Action Type
and Action Creator
could all be implemented in a single entity: Let's introduce Redux Fluent Actions.
Installation
yarn add redux-fluent redux flux-standard-action
Getting Started
import { createAction } from 'redux-fluent';
export const addTodo = createAction('todos | add');
import { createReducer, ofType } from 'redux-fluent';
import * as actions from './todos.actions.js';
const addTodo = (state, { payload }) => state.concat(payload);
export const todos = createReducer('todos')
.actions(
ofType(actions.addTodo).map(addTodo),
)
.default(() => []);
import { createStore } from 'redux';
import { combineReducers } from 'redux-fluent';
import * as actions from './todos.actions.js';
import { todos } from './todos.reducer.js';
const rootReducer = combineReducers(todos, ...);
const store = createStore(rootReducer);
console.log(store.getState());
store.dispatch(actions.addTodo({ title: 'Listen for some music' }));
console.log(store.getState());
Documentation
createReducer()
createReducer
is a function combinator whose purpose is to output a redux reducer by combining action handlers and getDefaultState
together.
import { createReducer } from 'redux-fluent';
const reducer = createReducer(name)
.actions(
...handlers: (state, action, config?) => state,
)
.default(
getDefaultState: (state: void, action, config?) => state,
);
createAction()
createAction
is a factory function whose purpose is to output an action creator responsible of shaping your actions. The resulting function holds a field type
giving you access to the action type.
import { createAction } from 'redux-fluent';
createAction(
type: string,
payloadCreator?: (rawPayload, rawMeta, type) => payload,
metaCreator?: (rawPayload, rawMeta, type) => meta,
);
const addTodo = createAction('todos | add');
console.log(addTodo.type);
console.log(addTodo({ id: 1, title: 'have a break' }));
ofType()
As we just said, a reducer is nothing more than a function combinator, it does not contain any business logic. The job of actually mutating the state is left to the Action Handlers. By embracing the Single Responsibility Principle, we can build simple, easy to test, dedicated functions that do only one thing.
import { ofType } from 'redux-fluent';
ofType(action: ReduxFluentActionCreator).map((state: any, action: RFA) => state);
ofType(type: string).map((state: any, action: AnyAction) => state);
ofType(action: { type: string }).map((state: any, action: AnyAction) => state);
ofType('todos | add').map(
(state, action) => state.concat(action.payload),
);
withConfig()
Redux Fluent also comes with some additional features to help you write code at scale. Functions that only rely on their arguments are easy to test and reuse, so you can provide an additional argument config: any
to enable dependency injection (multiple config
are shallowly merged).
import * as R from 'ramda';
import { withConfig, createReducer, ofType } from 'redux-fluent';
withConfig(config: any);
const todos = createReducer('todos')
.actions(
ofType('todos | doSomething').map(
(state, action, { doSomething }) => doSomething(state, action),
),
ofType('todos | doSomethingElse').map(
(state, action, { doSomethingElse }) => doSomethingElse(state, action),
),
)
.default(() => []);
export default R.pipe(
withConfig({ doSomething: R.tap(console.log) }),
withConfig({ doSomethingElse: R.tap(console.log) }),
)(todos);
combineReducers()
This api is not strictly needed, you can still use redux#combineReducers
. With Redux Fluent, by the way, both namespace and reducer are defined in the same place so that you don't need to take care of the shape when combining them.
import { createStore } from 'redux';
import { combineReducers } from 'redux-fluent';
import { todosReducer, notesReducer, otherReducer } from './reducers';
combineReducers(...reducers: ReduxFluentReducer[]);
const rootReducer = combineReducers(todosReducer, notesReducer, otherReducer, ...);
const store = createStore(rootReducer);
createReducersMapObject()
This api lets you combine your reducers with redux#combineReducers
, and can be useful when mixing redux fluent reducers with any other reducer.
import { createStore, combineReducers } from 'redux';
import { createReducersMapObject } from 'redux-fluent';
import { todosReducer, notesReducer, otherReducer } from './reducers';
createReducersMapObject(...reducers: ReduxFluentReducer[]);
const reducersMapObject = createReducersMapObject(todosReducer, notesReducer, otherReducer, ...);
const rootReducer = combineReducers({
...reducersMapObject,
anyOtherReducer: (state, action) => 'any other state',
});
const store = createStore(rootReducer);
Typescript Definitions