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Zustand is a state management library for React and other JavaScript applications. It provides a simple and flexible way to create and manage global state without the complexity of traditional solutions like Redux. Zustand uses a hook-based API to allow components to subscribe to state changes and define actions for updating the state.
Creating a store
This code sample demonstrates how to create a store with Zustand. The store has a state with a 'fishes' property and an 'addFish' action to increment the number of fishes.
import create from 'zustand';
const useStore = create(set => ({
fishes: 0,
addFish: () => set(state => ({ fishes: state.fishes + 1 }))
}));
Subscribing to state changes
This code sample shows how a React component can subscribe to state changes. The 'FishCounter' component uses the 'useStore' hook to access the number of fishes from the store's state.
import React from 'react';
import useStore from './store';
function FishCounter() {
const fishes = useStore(state => state.fishes);
return <div>{fishes} fishes</div>;
}
Updating the state
This code sample illustrates how to update the state using an action defined in the store. The 'AddFishButton' component gets the 'addFish' action from the store and uses it as an onClick event handler.
import React from 'react';
import useStore from './store';
function AddFishButton() {
const addFish = useStore(state => state.addFish);
return <button onClick={addFish}>Add a fish</button>;
}
Redux is a predictable state container for JavaScript apps. It is more complex than Zustand, involving actions, reducers, and middleware, making it suitable for larger applications with more complex state management needs.
MobX is a state management library that uses observable state objects and reactions to automatically track changes and update the UI. It is more opinionated than Zustand and uses a different paradigm based on observables.
Recoil is a state management library for React that provides a more granular approach to managing state with atoms and selectors. It is similar to Zustand in its simplicity but offers more advanced features for derived state and asynchronous queries.
React Context API is not a package but a built-in feature of React for managing state. It is simpler than Zustand but can lead to performance issues in larger applications due to unnecessary re-renders.
A small, fast and scalable bearbones state-management solution using simplified flux principles. Has a comfy API based on hooks, isn't boilerplatey or opinionated.
Don't disregard it because it's cute. It has quite the claws, lots of time was spent dealing with common pitfalls, like the dreaded zombie child problem, react concurrency, and context loss between mixed renderers. It may be the one state-manager in the React space that gets all of these right.
You can try a live demo here.
npm i zustand
:warning: This readme is written for JavaScript users. If you are a TypeScript user, be sure to check out our TypeScript Usage section.
Your store is a hook! You can put anything in it: primitives, objects, functions. State has to be updated immutably and the set
function merges state to help it.
import { create } from 'zustand'
const useBearStore = create((set) => ({
bears: 0,
increasePopulation: () => set((state) => ({ bears: state.bears + 1 })),
removeAllBears: () => set({ bears: 0 }),
}))
Use the hook anywhere, no providers are needed. Select your state and the component will re-render on changes.
function BearCounter() {
const bears = useBearStore((state) => state.bears)
return <h1>{bears} around here ...</h1>
}
function Controls() {
const increasePopulation = useBearStore((state) => state.increasePopulation)
return <button onClick={increasePopulation}>one up</button>
}
You can, but bear in mind that it will cause the component to update on every state change!
const state = useBearStore()
It detects changes with strict-equality (old === new) by default, this is efficient for atomic state picks.
const nuts = useBearStore((state) => state.nuts)
const honey = useBearStore((state) => state.honey)
If you want to construct a single object with multiple state-picks inside, similar to redux's mapStateToProps, you can use useShallow to prevent unnecessary rerenders when the selector output does not change according to shallow equal.
import { create } from 'zustand'
import { useShallow } from 'zustand/react/shallow'
const useBearStore = create((set) => ({
bears: 0,
increasePopulation: () => set((state) => ({ bears: state.bears + 1 })),
removeAllBears: () => set({ bears: 0 }),
}))
// Object pick, re-renders the component when either state.nuts or state.honey change
const { nuts, honey } = useBearStore(
useShallow((state) => ({ nuts: state.nuts, honey: state.honey })),
)
// Array pick, re-renders the component when either state.nuts or state.honey change
const [nuts, honey] = useBearStore(
useShallow((state) => [state.nuts, state.honey]),
)
// Mapped picks, re-renders the component when state.treats changes in order, count or keys
const treats = useBearStore(useShallow((state) => Object.keys(state.treats)))
For more control over re-rendering, you may provide any custom equality function.
const treats = useBearStore(
(state) => state.treats,
(oldTreats, newTreats) => compare(oldTreats, newTreats),
)
The set
function has a second argument, false
by default. Instead of merging, it will replace the state model. Be careful not to wipe out parts you rely on, like actions.
import omit from 'lodash-es/omit'
const useFishStore = create((set) => ({
salmon: 1,
tuna: 2,
deleteEverything: () => set({}, true), // clears the entire store, actions included
deleteTuna: () => set((state) => omit(state, ['tuna']), true),
}))
Just call set
when you're ready, zustand doesn't care if your actions are async or not.
const useFishStore = create((set) => ({
fishies: {},
fetch: async (pond) => {
const response = await fetch(pond)
set({ fishies: await response.json() })
},
}))
set
allows fn-updates set(state => result)
, but you still have access to state outside of it through get
.
const useSoundStore = create((set, get) => ({
sound: 'grunt',
action: () => {
const sound = get().sound
...
Sometimes you need to access state in a non-reactive way or act upon the store. For these cases, the resulting hook has utility functions attached to its prototype.
:warning: This technique is not recommended for adding state in React Server Components (typically in Next.js 13 and above). It can lead to unexpected bugs and privacy issues for your users. For more details, see #2200.
const useDogStore = create(() => ({ paw: true, snout: true, fur: true }))
// Getting non-reactive fresh state
const paw = useDogStore.getState().paw
// Listening to all changes, fires synchronously on every change
const unsub1 = useDogStore.subscribe(console.log)
// Updating state, will trigger listeners
useDogStore.setState({ paw: false })
// Unsubscribe listeners
unsub1()
// You can of course use the hook as you always would
function Component() {
const paw = useDogStore((state) => state.paw)
...
If you need to subscribe with a selector,
subscribeWithSelector
middleware will help.
With this middleware subscribe
accepts an additional signature:
subscribe(selector, callback, options?: { equalityFn, fireImmediately }): Unsubscribe
import { subscribeWithSelector } from 'zustand/middleware'
const useDogStore = create(
subscribeWithSelector(() => ({ paw: true, snout: true, fur: true })),
)
// Listening to selected changes, in this case when "paw" changes
const unsub2 = useDogStore.subscribe((state) => state.paw, console.log)
// Subscribe also exposes the previous value
const unsub3 = useDogStore.subscribe(
(state) => state.paw,
(paw, previousPaw) => console.log(paw, previousPaw),
)
// Subscribe also supports an optional equality function
const unsub4 = useDogStore.subscribe(
(state) => [state.paw, state.fur],
console.log,
{ equalityFn: shallow },
)
// Subscribe and fire immediately
const unsub5 = useDogStore.subscribe((state) => state.paw, console.log, {
fireImmediately: true,
})
Zustand core can be imported and used without the React dependency. The only difference is that the create function does not return a hook, but the API utilities.
import { createStore } from 'zustand/vanilla'
const store = createStore((set) => ...)
const { getState, setState, subscribe, getInitialState } = store
export default store
You can use a vanilla store with useStore
hook available since v4.
import { useStore } from 'zustand'
import { vanillaStore } from './vanillaStore'
const useBoundStore = (selector) => useStore(vanillaStore, selector)
:warning: Note that middlewares that modify set
or get
are not applied to getState
and setState
.
The subscribe function allows components to bind to a state-portion without forcing re-render on changes. Best combine it with useEffect for automatic unsubscribe on unmount. This can make a drastic performance impact when you are allowed to mutate the view directly.
const useScratchStore = create((set) => ({ scratches: 0, ... }))
const Component = () => {
// Fetch initial state
const scratchRef = useRef(useScratchStore.getState().scratches)
// Connect to the store on mount, disconnect on unmount, catch state-changes in a reference
useEffect(() => useScratchStore.subscribe(
state => (scratchRef.current = state.scratches)
), [])
...
Reducing nested structures is tiresome. Have you tried immer?
import { produce } from 'immer'
const useLushStore = create((set) => ({
lush: { forest: { contains: { a: 'bear' } } },
clearForest: () =>
set(
produce((state) => {
state.lush.forest.contains = null
}),
),
}))
const clearForest = useLushStore((state) => state.clearForest)
clearForest()
Alternatively, there are some other solutions.
You can persist your store's data using any kind of storage.
import { create } from 'zustand'
import { persist, createJSONStorage } from 'zustand/middleware'
const useFishStore = create(
persist(
(set, get) => ({
fishes: 0,
addAFish: () => set({ fishes: get().fishes + 1 }),
}),
{
name: 'food-storage', // name of the item in the storage (must be unique)
storage: createJSONStorage(() => sessionStorage), // (optional) by default, 'localStorage' is used
},
),
)
See the full documentation for this middleware.
Immer is available as middleware too.
import { create } from 'zustand'
import { immer } from 'zustand/middleware/immer'
const useBeeStore = create(
immer((set) => ({
bees: 0,
addBees: (by) =>
set((state) => {
state.bees += by
}),
})),
)
const types = { increase: 'INCREASE', decrease: 'DECREASE' }
const reducer = (state, { type, by = 1 }) => {
switch (type) {
case types.increase:
return { grumpiness: state.grumpiness + by }
case types.decrease:
return { grumpiness: state.grumpiness - by }
}
}
const useGrumpyStore = create((set) => ({
grumpiness: 0,
dispatch: (args) => set((state) => reducer(state, args)),
}))
const dispatch = useGrumpyStore((state) => state.dispatch)
dispatch({ type: types.increase, by: 2 })
Or, just use our redux-middleware. It wires up your main-reducer, sets the initial state, and adds a dispatch function to the state itself and the vanilla API.
import { redux } from 'zustand/middleware'
const useGrumpyStore = create(redux(reducer, initialState))
import { devtools } from 'zustand/middleware'
// Usage with a plain action store, it will log actions as "setState"
const usePlainStore = create(devtools((set) => ...))
// Usage with a redux store, it will log full action types
const useReduxStore = create(devtools(redux(reducer, initialState)))
One redux devtools connection for multiple stores
import { devtools } from 'zustand/middleware'
// Usage with a plain action store, it will log actions as "setState"
const usePlainStore1 = create(devtools((set) => ..., { name, store: storeName1 }))
const usePlainStore2 = create(devtools((set) => ..., { name, store: storeName2 }))
// Usage with a redux store, it will log full action types
const useReduxStore = create(devtools(redux(reducer, initialState)), , { name, store: storeName3 })
const useReduxStore = create(devtools(redux(reducer, initialState)), , { name, store: storeName4 })
Assigning different connection names will separate stores in redux devtools. This also helps group different stores into separate redux devtools connections.
devtools takes the store function as its first argument, optionally you can name the store or configure serialize options with a second argument.
Name store: devtools(..., {name: "MyStore"})
, which will create a separate instance named "MyStore" in the devtools.
Serialize options: devtools(..., { serialize: { options: true } })
.
devtools will only log actions from each separated store unlike in a typical combined reducers redux store. See an approach to combining stores https://github.com/pmndrs/zustand/issues/163
You can log a specific action type for each set
function by passing a third parameter:
const useBearStore = create(devtools((set) => ({
...
eatFish: () => set(
(prev) => ({ fishes: prev.fishes > 1 ? prev.fishes - 1 : 0 }),
undefined,
'bear/eatFish'
),
...
You can also log the action's type along with its payload:
...
addFishes: (count) => set(
(prev) => ({ fishes: prev.fishes + count }),
undefined,
{ type: 'bear/addFishes', count, }
),
...
If an action type is not provided, it is defaulted to "anonymous". You can customize this default value by providing an anonymousActionType
parameter:
devtools(..., { anonymousActionType: 'unknown', ... })
If you wish to disable devtools (on production for instance). You can customize this setting by providing the enabled
parameter:
devtools(..., { enabled: false, ... })
The store created with create
doesn't require context providers. In some cases, you may want to use contexts for dependency injection or if you want to initialize your store with props from a component. Because the normal store is a hook, passing it as a normal context value may violate the rules of hooks.
The recommended method available since v4 is to use the vanilla store.
import { createContext, useContext } from 'react'
import { createStore, useStore } from 'zustand'
const store = createStore(...) // vanilla store without hooks
const StoreContext = createContext()
const App = () => (
<StoreContext.Provider value={store}>
...
</StoreContext.Provider>
)
const Component = () => {
const store = useContext(StoreContext)
const slice = useStore(store, selector)
...
Basic typescript usage doesn't require anything special except for writing create<State>()(...)
instead of create(...)
...
import { create } from 'zustand'
import { devtools, persist } from 'zustand/middleware'
import type {} from '@redux-devtools/extension' // required for devtools typing
interface BearState {
bears: number
increase: (by: number) => void
}
const useBearStore = create<BearState>()(
devtools(
persist(
(set) => ({
bears: 0,
increase: (by) => set((state) => ({ bears: state.bears + by })),
}),
{
name: 'bear-storage',
},
),
),
)
A more complete TypeScript guide is here.
Some users may want to extend Zustand's feature set which can be done using third-party libraries made by the community. For information regarding third-party libraries with Zustand, visit the doc.
FAQs
🐻 Bear necessities for state management in React
The npm package zustand receives a total of 3,396,250 weekly downloads. As such, zustand popularity was classified as popular.
We found that zustand demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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