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A library for better state management in react hooks world

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React Store

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React Store is a state management library for React which facilitates to split components into smaller and maintainable ones then share States between them and also let developers to use classes to manage their components logic alongside it's IOC container.

Table of content

Installation

First install core library:

yarn add @react-store/core

Then enable decorators and decorators metadata in typescript:

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "emitDecoratorMetadata": true,
    "experimentalDecorators": true
}

You can also use other javascript transpilers such as babel.

See example folder for those how use Create-React-App

Usage

Now it's ready. First create a Store:

// user.store.ts
import { Store } from "@react-store/core";

@Store()
class UserStore {
  name: string;

  onNameChange(e: ChangeEvent) {
    this.name = e.target.value;
  }
}

Then connect it to the component tree by using connect function as component wrapper, call useStore and pass it store class to access store instance:

// App.tsx
import { connect, useStore } from "@react-store/core";

interface Props {
  p1: string;
}

const App = connect((props: Props) => {
  const st = useStore(UserStore);
  return (
    <div>
      {st.name}
      <Input />
    </div>
  );
}, UserStore);

And enjoy to use store in child components.

import { useStore } from "@react-store/core";

function Input() {
  const st = useStore(UserStore);
  return (
    <div>
      <span>Name is: </span>
      <input onChange={st.onNameChange} />
    </div>
  );
}

Store property & method

  • Property: Each store property behind the sense is a [state, setState] = useState(initVal) it means when you set store property, actually you are doing setState and also when you read the property, actually you are reading the state but in reading scenario if you have been mutated state before reading it you will receive new value even before any rerender.

  • Method: Store methods are used for state mutations. store methods are bound to store class instance by default. feel free to use them like below:

function Input() {
  const st = useStore(UserStore);
  return <input onChange={st.onNameChange} />;
}

Effects

You can manage side effects with @Effect() decorator. Like react useEffect dependency array you must define an array of dependencies.
For clear effect you can return a function from this method.

@Store()
class UserStore {
  name: string;

  @Effect((_: UserStore) => [_.name])
  nameChanged() {
    console.log("name changed to:", this.name);
    return () => console.log("Clear Effect");
  }
}

You also can pass object as dependency item with deep equal mode. To do that, pass true as second parameters:

@Store()
export class UserStore {
  user = { name: "" };

  @Effect<UserStore>((_) => [_.user], true)
  usernameChanged() {
    console.log("name changed to:", this.name);
  }
}

Instead of passing a function to effect decorator to detect dependencies you can pass an array of paths

@Store()
export class UserStore {
  user = { name: "" };

  @Effect(["user.name"])
  usernameChanged() {}

  // Only one dependency does not need to be warped by an array
  @Effect("user", true)
  userChanged() {}
}

Memo

To memoize a value you can use @Memo decorator. Memo decorator parameters is like effect decorator:

@Store()
export class UserStore {
  user = { name: "", pass: "" };

  // @Memo(["user.name"])
  @Memo("user.name")
  get usernameLen() {
    return this.user.name.length;
  }

  @Memo(["user"], true)
  get passLen() {
    return this.user.pass;
  }
}

You can manage side effects with @Effect() decorator. Like react useEffect dependency array you must define an array of dependencies.
For clear effect you can return a function from this method.

Methods which decorate with @Effect() can be async, but if you want to return clear effect function make it sync method

Props

To have store parent component props (the component directly connected to store by using connect) inside store class use @Props():

// user.store.ts
import type { Props as AppProps } from "./App";
import { Props, Store } from "@react-store/core";

@Store()
export class UserStore {
  @Props()
  props: AppProps;
}

Store Part

Store Part like store is a class which is decorated with @StorePart() and can only be connected to a store with @Wire() decorator.

@StorePart()
class Validator {
  object: Record<string, unknown>;

  hasError = false;

  @Effect("object", true)
  validate() {
    this.hasError = someValidator(object).hasError;
  }
}

@Store()
class UserForm {
  user: User;

  @Wire(Validator)
  validator: Validator;

  @Effect([])
  onMount() {
    this.validator.object = this.user;
  }

  onUsernameChange(username) {
    this.user.username = username;
  }
}
  • Store part can not be used directly with useStore and must be wired to a store.
  • Like store, store part can have it's effects, dependency injection.
  • Store part is piece of logics and states can be wired to any other store and play a role like React custom hooks

Computed Property

You can define getter in store class and automatically it will be a computed value. it means that if any underlying class properties which is used in getter change, we will recompute getter value and cache it.

@Store()
class BoxStore {
  width: number;

  height: number;

  get area() {
    return (this.width + this.height) * 2;
  }
}

Dependency Injection

In this library we have also supported dependency injection. To define Injectables, decorate class with @Injectable():

@Injectable()
class UserService {}

In order to inject dependencies into injectable, use @Inject(...):

@Injectable()
@Inject(AuthService, UserService)
class PostService {
  constructor(private authService: AuthService, private userService: UserService) {}
}

Also you can use @Inject() as parameter decorator:

@Injectable()
@Inject(AuthService)
class PostService {
  constructor(
    private authService: AuthService,
    @Inject(UserService) private userService: UserService
  ) {}
}

Injection works fine for stores. Injectable can be injected into all stores. Also stores can be injected into other stores but there is one condition. For example, you want to inject A store into B store so the component which is wrapped with connect(..., A) must be higher in B store parent component. In other words, it works like React useContext rule.

@Injectable()
@Inject(AlertsStore)
class UserStore {
  constructor(private alertsStore: AlertsStore) {}
}