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redux-watch

NPM Package Build Status

js-standard-style

Watch/observe Redux store state changes.

Why?

Redux provides you with a subscribe() method so that you can be notified when the state changes. However, it does not let you know what changed. redux-watch will let you know what changed.

Install

npm i --save redux-watch

Usage

watch(getState [, objectPath [, comparison]]) -> function

Example

basic example
// ... other imports/requires
import watch from 'redux-watch'

// assuming you have an admin reducer / state slice
console.log(store.getState().admin.name) // 'JP'

// store is THE redux store
let w = watch(store.getState, 'admin.name')
store.subscribe(w((newVal, oldVal, objectPath) => {
  console.log('%s changed from %s to %s', objectPath, oldVal, newVal)
  // admin.name changed from JP to JOE
}))

// somewhere else, admin reducer handles ADMIN_UPDATE
store.dispatch({ type: 'ADMIN_UPDATE', payload: { name: 'JOE' }})
example (w/ reselect (reactjs/reselect) selectors)

When using with selectors, you often times won't need to pass the object path. Most times the selectors will handle this for you.

// ... other imports requires
import watch from 'redux-watch'

// assuming mySelector is a reselect selector defined somewhere
let w = watch(() => mySelector(store.getState()))
store.subscribe(w((newVal, oldVal) => {
  console.log(newVal)
  console.log(oldVal)
}))

Note on Comparisons.

By default, redux-watch uses === (strict equal) operator to check for changes. This may not be want you want. Sometimes you may want to do a deep inspection. You should use either deep-equal (substack/node-deep-equal) or is-equal (ljharb/is-equal). is-equal is better since it supports ES6 types like Maps/Sets.

is-equal example
import isEqual from 'is-equal'
import watch from 'redux-watch'

let w = watch(store.getState, 'admin', isEqual)
store.subscribe(w((newVal, oldVal, objectPath) => {
  // response to changes
}))

License

MIT