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refract-xstream
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Refract bindings for React with xstream: harness the power of reactive programming to supercharge your components!
Harness the power of reactive programming
to supercharge your components
Why? · Install · The gist · Learn · Contribute · Discuss
Refract lets you handle your component effects and side-effects, so that you can write your code in a clear, pure, and declarative fashion by using reactive programming.
Refract makes reactive programming possible in React, React Native, Preact and Inferno, with only a single higher-order component! You can choose to start using a tiny bit of reactive programming, or go full reactive. Refract allows you to:
connect
HoCWe also provide a Redux integration, which can serve as a template for integrations with other libraries. With a single HoC, you can fully replace libraries like recompose, redux-observable, and react-redux to name a few!
Component-based architecture and functional programming have become an increasingly popular approach for building UIs. They help make apps more predictable, more testable, and more maintainable.
However, our apps don't exist in a vacuum! They need to handle state, make network requests, handle data persistence, log analytics, deal with changing time, and so on. Any non-trivial app has to handle any number of these effects. Wouldn't it be nice to cleanly separate them from our apps?
Refract solves this problem for you, by harnessing the power of reactive programming. For an in-depth introduction, head to Why Refract
.
npm install --save refract-xstream
Refract is available for a number of reactive programming libraries. For each library, a Refract integration is available for React, Inferno, Preact and Redux.
Available packages:
React | Inferno | Preact | Redux | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Callbag | refract-callbag | refract-inferno-callbag | refract-preact-callbag | refract-redux-callbag |
Most | refract-most | refract-inferno-most | refract-preact-most | refract-redux-most |
RxJS | refract-rxjs | refract-inferno-rxjs | refract-preact-rxjs | refract-redux-rxjs |
xstream | refract-xstream | refract-inferno-xstream | refract-preact-xstream | refract-redux-xstream |
The example below uses refract-rxjs
to send data to localstorage.
Every time the username
prop changes, its new value is sent into the stream. The stream debounces the input for two seconds, then maps it into an object (with a type
of localstorage
) under the key value
. Each time an effect with the correct type is emitted from this pipeline, the handler calls localstorage.setItem
with the effect's name
and value
properties.
const aperture = component => {
return component.observe('username').pipe(
debounce(2000),
map(username => ({
type: 'localstorage',
name: 'username',
value: username
}))
)
}
const handler = initialProps => effect => {
switch (effect.type) {
case 'localstorage':
localstorage.setItem(effect.name, effect.value)
return
}
}
const WrappedComponent = withEffects(aperture, { handler })(BaseComponent)
An aperture
controls the streams of data entering Refract. It is a function which observes data sources within your app, passes this data through any necessary logic flows, and outputs a stream of effect
s.
Signature: (component, initialProps) => { return effectStream }
.
initialProps
are all props passed into the WrappedComponent
.component
is an object which lets you observe your React component.A handler
is a function which causes side-effects in response to any effect
object output by the aperture
.
Signature: (initialProps) => (effect) => { /* handle effects here */ }
.
initialProps
are all props passed into the WrappedComponent
.effect
is each event emitted by your aperture
.The withEffects
higher-order component implements your side-effect logic as a React component.
Signature: (aperture, { handler }) => (Component) => { return WrappedComponent }
aperture
functionconfig
object accepting
handler
functionerrorHandler
functionContext
object (React only)WrappedComponent
- an enhanced version of your original Component
which includes your side-effect logic.Documentation is available at refract.js.org. We aim to provide a helpful and thorough documentation: all documentation files are located on this repo and we welcome any pull request helping us achieve that goal.
We maintain and will grow over time a set of examples to illustrate the potential of Refract, as well as providing reactive programming examples: refract.js.org/examples.
Examples are illustrative and not the idiomatic way to use Refract. Each example is available for the four reactive libraries we support (RxJS, xstream, Most and Callbag), and we provide links to run the code live on codesandbox.io. All examples are hosted on this repo, and we welcome pull requests helping us maintaining them.
We welcome many forms of contribution from anyone who wishes to get involved.
Before getting started, please read through our contributing guidelines and code of conduct.
The Refract logo is available in the Logo directory.
Refract is available under the MIT license.
Everyone is welcome to join our discussion channel - #refract
on the Reactiflux Discord server.
FAQs
Refract bindings for React with xstream: harness the power of reactive programming to supercharge your components!
The npm package refract-xstream receives a total of 519 weekly downloads. As such, refract-xstream popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that refract-xstream demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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