@myode/redux-loop
v5.0.2
Published
Sequence your effects naturally and purely by returning them from your reducers.
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A port of the Elm Architecture to Redux that allows you to sequence your effects naturally and purely by returning them from your reducers.
Isn't it incorrect to cause side-effects in a reducer?
Yes! Absolutely.
Doesn't redux-loop put side-effects in the reducer?
It doesn't. The values returned from the reducer when scheduling an effect with redux-loop only describe the effect. Calling the reducer will not cause the effect to run. The value returned by the reducer is just an object that the store knows how to interpret when it is enhanced by redux-loop. You can safely call a reducer in your tests without worrying about waiting for effects to finish and what they will do to your environment.
What are the environment requirements for redux-loop?
redux-loop
requires polyfills for ES6 Promise
and Symbol
to be included if
the browsers you target don't natively support them.
Why use this?
Having used and followed the progression of Redux and the Elm Architecture, and after trying other effect patterns for Redux, we came to the following conclusion:
Synchronous state transitions caused by returning a new state from the reducer in response to an action are just one of all possible effects an action can have on application state.
Many other methods for handling effects in Redux, especially those implemented
with action-creators, incorrectly teach the user that asynchronous effects are
fundamentally different from synchronous state transitions. This separation
encourages divergent and increasingly specific means of processing particular
types effects. Instead, we should focus on making our reducers powerful enough
to handle asynchronous effects as well as synchronous state transitions. With
redux-loop
, the reducer doesn't just decide what happens now due to a
particular action, it decides what happens next. All of the behavior of your
application can be traced through one place, and that behavior can be easily broken
apart and composed back together. This is one of the most powerful features of the
Elm architecture, and with
redux-loop
it is a feature of Redux as well.
Installation
npm install --save redux-loop
Support
Potential bugs, general discussion, and proposals or RFCs should be submitted
as issues to this repo, we'll do our best to address them quickly. We use this
library as well and want it to be the best it can! For questions about using the
library, submit questions on StackOverflow
with the redux-loop
tag.
Slack channel
Don't see a feature you want?
If you're interested in adding something to redux-loop
but don't want to wait
for us to incorporate the idea you can follow these steps to get your own installable
version of redux-loop
with your feature included:
- Fork the main repo here
- Add your feature or change
- Change the package
"name"
in package.json to be"@<your-npm-username>/redux-loop
- Commit to master and
npm publish
npm install @<your-npm-username>/redux-loop
We are always interested in new ideas, but sometimes we get a little busy and fall behind on responding and reviewing PRs. Hopefully this process will allow you to continue making progress on your projects and also provide us with more context if and when you do decide to make a PR for your new feature or change. The best way to verify new features for a library is to use them in real-world scenarios!
Contributing
Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms. Multiple language translations are available at contributor-covenant.org