react-hookstore
v1.5.2
Published
A state management library for react using the bleeding edge hooks feature
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5,830
Maintainers
Readme
This library is not maintained anymore. Don't use it.
This started as a curiosity project to explore React hooks. It gained some attention but there are better and production ready solutions that are just as simple as react-hookstore. Give them a try (I myself am using them):
Jotai
A primitive state management library. It's very similar to React Hookstore with much better internals and apis. Github | Website
Zustand
A redux-like state management library. It's still simple enough to resemble React Hookstore. Github | Website
React Hook Store
A very simple and small (1k gzipped!) state management lib for React that uses the bleeding edge React's useState
hook.
Which basically means no magic behind the curtains, only pure react APIs being used to share state across components.
Try it on Codesandbox!
Table of Contents
⚠️ BREAKING CHANGES: in version 1.4+,
store.subscribe
was simplified. check the Store Interface API
Installation
You can install the lib through NPM or grab the files in the dist
folder of this repository.
npm install --save react-hookstore
Usage
Basic
This is the most basic implementation of the library. create a store with its initial state.
Later, call useStore
inside components to retrieve its state and setState method.
The value passed as the first argument to the setState method will be the new state. no reducer required (but you can use a reducer, see the advanced example down below).
import React from 'react';
import { createStore, useStore } from 'react-hookstore';
createStore('clickStore', 0);
function StatefullHello() {
// just use the useStore method to grab the state and the setState methods
const [ timesClicked, setClicks ] = useStore('clickStore');
return (
<div>
<h1>Hello, component!</h1>
<h2>The button inside this component was clicked {timesClicked} times</h2>
<button type="button" onClick={() => setClicks(timesClicked+1)}>Update</button>
</div>
);
}
function AnotherComponent() {
// you can name the state whatever you want
const [ timesClicked ] = useStore('clickStore');
return (
<div>
<h1>Hello, this is a second component, with no relation to the one on the top</h1>
<h2>But it is still aware of how many times the button was clicked: {timesClicked} </h2>
</div>
)
}
Referencing stores
It is possible to create multiple stores in an app. Stores can be referenced by using their instance that is returned by the createStore method, as well as using their name.
import React from 'react';
import { createStore, useStore } from 'react-hookstore';
const clickCount = createStore('clickCountStore', 0);
createStore('nameStore', 'John Doe');
// counter will start at 2
clickCount.setState(2);
function StatefullHello() {
// this line will reference a store by its instance
const [ clicks, setClicks ] = useStore(clickCount);
// this line will reference a store by its name
const [ name ] = useStore('nameStore');
return (
<div>
<h1>Hello, {name}!</h1>
<h2>The button inside this component was clicked {clicks} times</h2>
<button type="button" onClick={() => setClicks(clicks+1)}>Update</button>
</div>
);
}
Both methods can be used and mixed according to the needs, but we recomend using the instance identifiers.
Reducer powered stores
We can delegate the state management to reducers (just like redux!) if we want.
import React from 'react';
import { createStore, useStore } from 'react-hookstore';
const todoListStore = createStore(
'todoList',
{
idCount: 0,
todos: [{ id: 0, text: 'buy milk' }]
},
(state, action) => {
// when a reducer is being used, you must return a new state value
switch (action.type) {
case 'add':
const id = ++state.idCount;
return {
...state,
todos: [...state.todos, { id, text: action.payload }]
};
case 'delete':
return {
...state,
todos: state.todos.filter(todo => todo.id !== action.payload)
};
default:
return state;
}
}
);
function AddTodo() {
const [state, dispatch] = useStore('todoList');
const inputRef = React.useRef(null);
const onSubmit = e => {
e.preventDefault();
const todo = inputRef.current.value;
inputRef.current.value = '';
dispatch({ type: 'add', payload: todo });
};
return (
<form onSubmit={onSubmit}>
<input ref={inputRef} />
<button>Create TODO</button>
</form>
);
}
function TodoList() {
const [{ todos }, dispatch] = useStore(todoListStore);
const deleteTodo = id => dispatch({ type: 'delete', payload: id });
return (
<ul>
<h2>TODOLIST</h2>
{todos.map(todo => (
<li key={todo.id}>
{todo.text}{' '}
<button onClick={() => deleteTodo(todo.id)} type="button">
X
</button>
</li>
))}
</ul>
);
}
export { TodoList, AddTodo };
More examples
Check out the Codesandbox demo!
Methods API
createStore(name:String, state?:*, reducer?:Function):StoreInterface
Creates a store to be used across the entire application. Returns a StoreInterface object.
Arguments
name:String
The namespace for your store, it can be used to identify the store across the application.
state:* = {}
The store's initial state. it can be any data type. defaults to an empty object. Optional
reducer:Function
You can specify a reducer function to take care of state changes. the reducer functions receives two arguments, the previous state and the action that triggered the state update. the function must return a new state, if not, the new state will be null
. Optional
getStoreByName(name:String):StoreInterface
Finds a store by its name and returns its instance.
Arguments
name:String
The name of the store.
Objects API
StoreInterface
The store instance that is returned by the createStore and getStoreByName methods.
Interface
name:String
The name of the store;
getState:Function():*
A method that returns the store's current state
setState:Function(state:*, callback?:Function)
Sets the state of the store. works if the store does not use a reducer state handler. Otherwise, use dispatch
. callback is optional and will be invoked once the state is updated, receiving the updated state as argument.
dispatch:Function(action:*, callback?:Function)
Dispatches whatever is passed into this function to the store. works if the store uses a reducer state handler. Otherwise, use setState
. callback is optional and will be invoked once the state is updated, receiving the updated state as argument.
subscribe:Function(callback:Function):unsubscribe:Function
The callback function will be invoked everytime the store state changes. If the store is reducer-based, the callback function will be called with action
as the first argument and state
as the second. otherwise, it'll be called with state
as the only argument.
the subscribe method returns a function that can be called in order to cancel the subscription for the callback function.
React API
useStore(identifier:String|StoreInterface):Array[state, setState|dispatch]
A function that returns a pair with the current state and a function to trigger state updates for the specified store.
Arguments
Identifier:String|StoreInterface
The store identifier. It can be either its string name or its StoreInterface instance returned by a createStore or getStoreByName method.
Migrating from v1.0 to v1.1
- createStore now receives 3 arguments instead of an object with 3 properties.
- the name argument is now required even if only one store is being used.
// v1.0
createStore({state: 0});
createStore({
name: 'store',
state: 0,
reducer(state, action) {
return state + action;
}
})
// v1.1
createStore('myStore', 0);
createStore('store', 0, (state, value) => state + action);