Awesome
React Motive
Small wrapper around the React Context API with actions/dispatch style state management.
Install
yarn add react-motive
Example
import React from 'react';
import createMotive from 'react-motive';
/**
* Default State
*/
const defaultState = { count: 0 };
/**
* Actions:
*
* Actions don't have to be curried functions if they don't take arguments
* as long as dispatch is given a function that returns a new slice of state.
*/
const increment = () => ({ count }) => ({
count: count + 1,
});
const decrement = () => ({ count }) => ({
count: count - 1,
});
/**
* Create Container
*/
const Counter = createMotive(defaultState);
/**
* Use Consumers
*/
const Display = () => (
<Counter.Consumer>
{({ state }) => <h1>Count: {state.count}</h1>}
</Counter.Consumer>
);
const Controls = () => (
<Counter.Consumer>
{({ dispatch }) => (
<React.Fragment>
<button onClick={() => dispatch(decrement())}>-</button>
<button onClick={() => dispatch(increment())}>+</button>
</React.Fragment>
)}
</Counter.Consumer>
);
/**
* Put it all together
*/
const AllTogether = () => (
<Counter.Provider>
<Display />
<Controls />
</Counter.Provider>
);
Documentation
createMotive
createMotive
returns an object with a Provider
component and a Consumer
component.
const defaultState = { count: 1 };
const { Provider, Consumer } = createMotive(defaultState);
<Provider>
The Provider
is a React component that should wrap all of its corresponding Consumer
components. This component holds all of the state given from defaultState
and that is updated later on.
<Consumer>
The Consumer
component is what you can use anywhere as long as it's a child of the corresponding Provider
component. Use this component to get access to the state of its Provider
and to dispatch updates to that state.
<Consumer>
{({ state, dispatch }) => /* ... some react stuff that uses state or dispatch */ }
</Consumer>
This component takes a render prop as its child. This render prop is given an object with the following members in it.
state
This is the current state of the corresponding Provider
component.
dispatch
dispatch
should be called with an action
function. An action
should return a slice of new state to be merged into the Provider
's state.
Actions
Actions are provided with state
and dispatch
as arguments. This means you can dispatch other actions from an action if necessary.
An action must return a partial version of state.
Pro Tip: If you need to give actions data, write them as curried functions and call them into dispatch
with any arugments that they might need.
/**
* Basic action
*/
const increment = (state) => ({
count: state.count + 1,
});
dispatch(increment);
/**
* Curried action that takes arguments
*/
const incrementBy = (incrBy) => (state) => ({
count: state.count + incrBy,
});
dispatch(incrementBy(2));
/**
* Action that dispatches another action
*/
const delayedIncrement = (state, dispatch) => {
setTimeout(() => dispatch(incrementBy(2)));
return {
count: state.count + 1,
};
};
dispatch(delayedIncrement);
combineActions
combineActions
will take two actions and combine their returned updated pieces of state into one updated piece of state.
const defaultState = {
a: 0,
b: 0,
};
const actionA = (state) => {
return {
a: state.a + 1,
};
};
const actionB = (state) => ({
b: state.b + 2,
});
const combined = combineActions(actionsA, actionB);
const resultingState = dispatch(combined);
resultingState === { a: 1, b: 2 };