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influer

v1.0.3

Published

A tiny (<1 KB) reactivity library

Downloads

3

Readme

Introduction

influer is a tiny reactivity library. Exported in ESM, CJS, and IIFE, all < 1KB.

Available through Yarn/NPM:

# Yarn
yarn add influer
# NPM
npm install influer

Or a CDN:

<script defer src="https://unpkg.com/influer"></script>

Features

  • Tiny (< 1KB, 0 dependencies)
  • Use in Browser / NodeJS
  • Full TypeScript support

Example

import influer from 'influer';

// Create your state
export const { state, watch } = influer({
    user: {
        firstname: 'John',
        lastname: 'Doe',
    },
});

// Watch user's firstname
watch('user.firstname', (current, previous) => {
    console.log(`Updated from ${previous} to ${current}`);
});

// Update the user somewhere
state.user.firstname = 'Jane';

// Updated from John to Jane

API

The influer (default exported) method gives you an object with a state, and two functions watch and watchOnce.

You must pass an object as an argument to influer, which represents the initial state. You can then export those variables to make them available on your application.

export const { state, watch } = influer({
    user: {
        firstname: 'John',
        lastname: 'Doe',
    },
});

state

When you need to modify the state, simply re-affect the desired field. If you use TypeScript and don't follow the type of the original state, you will have a warning.

import { state } from '...';

// Re-affect the whole user object
state.user = {
    firstname: 'Jane',
    lastname: 'Due',
};

// Re-affect only the firstname
state.user.firstname = 'Jane';

watch

You can watch any object or property from the state using the watch or watchOnce methods.

With TypeScript, you can get auto-completion for all available keys to watch, corresponding to the objects or property in the state.

import { watch } from '...';

// Watch the whole user object
watch('user', (current, previous) => ...);

// Watch only the firstname
watch('user.firstname', (current, previous) => ...);

As you can see, you must pass a watcher callback as a second argument, which will be called when the property linked to the key will be updated.

This watcher callback gives you the current and the previous value of the property. If you return something which is not null or undefined inside this watcher callback, the value of this property will be updated to the one returned.

watch('user.firstname', (current) => {
    if(current === 'John') {
        return 'Mister John';
    }
});

state.user.firstname = 'Jane';
// firstname = Jane

state.user.firstname = 'John';
// firstname = Mister John

watchOnce

The same method as watch, except that the watcher callback will be called once, and the key will not be watched anymore.

You can reproduce the same behavior and stop watching a key at any time: the watch method returns an unwatch method that you can call:

const unwatch = watch('user.firstname', (current, previous) => ...);

state.user.firstname = 'Jane';
// firstname = Jane

unwatch();

state.user.firstname = 'John';
// firstname = Jane

License

MIT