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react-organism

v0.3.9

Published

Separate React state in a dead simple functional way

Downloads

8

Readme

React Organism

Travis npm package Coveralls

Dead simple React/Preact state management to bring pure components alive

  • Supports async/await and easy loading (e.g. fetch())
  • Reload when particular props change
  • Animate using generator functions: just yield the new state for each frame
  • Tiny: 1.69 KB gzipped (3.49 KB uncompressed)
  • Embraces the existing functional setState while avoiding boilerplate (no writing this.setState() or .bind again)
  • Easy to unit test

Table of contents

Installation

npm i react-organism --save

Demos

Usage

Basic

// organisms/Counter.js
import makeOrganism from 'react-organism'
import Counter from './components/Counter'

export default makeOrganism(Counter, {
  initial: () => ({ count: 0 }),
  increment: () => ({ count }) => ({ count: count + 1 }),
  decrement: () => ({ count }) => ({ count: count - 1 })
})
// components/Counter.js
import React, { Component } from 'react'

export default function Counter({
  count,
  handlers: {
    increment,
    decrement
  }
}) {
  return (
    <div>
      <button onClick={ decrement } children='−' />
      <span>{ count }</span>
      <button onClick={ increment } children='+' />
    </div>
  )
}

Using props

The handlers can easily use props, which are always passed as the first argument

// organisms/Counter.js
import makeOrganism from 'react-organism'
import Counter from './components/Counter'

export default makeOrganism(Counter, {
  initial: ({ initialCount = 0 }) => ({ count: initialCount }),
  increment: ({ stride = 1 }) => ({ count }) => ({ count: count + stride }),
  decrement: ({ stride = 1 }) => ({ count }) => ({ count: count - stride })
})

// Render passing prop: <CounterOrganism stride={ 20 } />

Async

Asynchronous code to load from an API is easy:

// components/Items.js
import React, { Component } from 'react'

export default function Items({
  items,
  collectionName,
  handlers: {
    load
  }
}) {
  return (
    <div>
      {
        !!items ? (
          `${items.length} ${collectionName}`
        ) : (
          'Loading…'
        )
      }
      <div>
        <button onClick={ load } children='Reload' />
      </div>
    </div>
  )
}
// organisms/Items.js
import makeOrganism from 'react-organism'
import Items from '../components/Items'

const baseURL = 'https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com'
const fetchAPI = (path) => fetch(baseURL + path).then(r => r.json())

export default makeOrganism(Items, {
  initial: () => ({ items: null }),

  load: async ({ path }, prevProps) => {
    if (!prevProps || path !== prevProps.path) {
      return { items: await fetchAPI(path) }
    }
  }
})
<div>
  <ItemsOrganism path='/photos' collectionName='photos' />
  <ItemsOrganism path='/todos' collectionName='todo items' />
</div>

Handling events

Handlers can easily accept arguments such as events.

// components/Calculator.js
import React, { Component } from 'react'

export default function Calculator({
  value,
  handlers: {
    changeValue,
    double,
    add3,
    initial
  }
}) {
  return (
    <div>
      <input value={ value } onChange={ changeValue } />
      <button onClick={ double } children='Double' />
      <button onClick={ add3 } children='Add 3' />
      <button onClick={ initial } children='reset' />
    </div>
  )
}
// organisms/Calculator.js
import makeOrganism from 'react-organism'
import Calculator from '../components/Calculator'

export default makeOrganism(Calculator, {
  initial: ({ initialValue = 0 }) => ({ value: initialValue }),
  // Destructure event to get target
  changeValue: (props, { target }) => ({ value }) => ({ value: parseInt(target.value, 10) }),
  double: () => ({ value }) => ({ value: value * 2 }),
  add3: () => ({ value }) => ({ value: value + 3 })
})

Animation

import makeOrganism from 'react-organism'
import Counter from '../components/Counter'

export default makeOrganism(Counter, {
  initial: ({ initialCount = 0 }) => ({ count: initialCount }),
  increment: function * ({ stride = 20 }) {
    while (stride > 0) {
      yield ({ count }) => ({ count: count + 1 })
      stride -= 1
    }
  },
  decrement: function * ({ stride = 20 }) {
    while (stride > 0) {
      yield ({ count }) => ({ count: count - 1 })
      stride -= 1
    }
  }
})

Automatically extract from data- attributes and <forms>

Example coming soon

Serialization: Local storage

// organisms/Counter.js
import makeOrganism from 'react-organism'
import Counter from '../components/Counter'

const localStorageKey = 'counter'

export default makeOrganism(Counter, {
  initial: ({ initialCount = 0 }) => ({ count: initialCount }),
  load: async (props, prevProps) => {
    if (!prevProps) {
      // Try commenting out:
      /* throw (new Error('Oops!')) */

      // Load previously stored state, if present
      return await JSON.parse(localStorage.getItem(localStorageKey))
    }
  },
  increment: ({ stride = 1 }) => ({ count }) => ({ count: count + stride }),
  decrement: ({ stride = 1 }) => ({ count }) => ({ count: count - stride })
}, {
  onChange(state) {
    // When state changes, save in local storage
    localStorage.setItem(localStorageKey, JSON.stringify(state))
  }
})

Separate and reuse state handlers

React Organism supports separating state handlers and the component into their own files. This means state handlers could be reused by multiple smart components.

Here’s an example of separating state:

// state/counter.js
export const initial = () => ({
  count: 0
})

export const increment = () => ({ count }) => ({ count: count + 1 })
export const decrement = () => ({ count }) => ({ count: count - 1 })
// organisms/Counter.js
import makeOrganism from 'react-organism'
import Counter from './components/Counter'
import * as counterState from './state/counter'

export default makeOrganism(Counter, counterState)
// App.js
import React from 'react'
import CounterOrganism from './organisms/Counter'

class App extends React.Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <div>
        <CounterOrganism />
      </div>
    )
  }
}

Multicelled Organisms

Example coming soon.

API

makeOrganism(PureComponent, StateFunctions, options?)

import makeOrganism from 'react-organism'

Creates a smart component, rendering using React component PureComponent, and managing state using StateFunctions.

PureComponent

A React component, usually a pure functional component. This component is passed as its props:

  • The props passed to the smart component, combined with
  • The current state, combined with
  • handlers which correspond to each function in StateFunctions and are ready to be passed to e.g. onClick, onChange, etc.
  • loadError?: Error produced by the load handler
  • handlerError?: Error produced by any other handler

StateFunctions

Object with functional handlers. See state functions below.

Either pass a object directly with each function, or create a separate file with each handler function exported out, and then bring in using import * as StateFunctions from '...'.

options

adjustArgs?(args: array) => newArgs: array

Used to enhance handlers. See built-in handlers below.

onChange?(state)

Called after the state has changed, making it ideal for saving the state somewhere (e.g. Local Storage).

State functions

Your state is handled by a collection of functions. Each function is pure: they can only rely on the props and state passed to them. Functions return the new state, either immediately or asynchronously.

Each handler is passed the current props first, followed by the called arguments:

  • (props, event): most event handlers, e.g. onClick, onChange
  • (props, first, second): e.g. handler(first, second)
  • (props, ...args): get all arguments passed
  • (props): ignore any arguments
  • (): ignore props and arguments

Handlers must return one of the following:

  • An object with new state changes, a la React’s setState(changes).
  • A function accepting the previous state and current props, and returns the new state, a la React’s setState((prevState, props) => changes).
  • A promise resolving to any of the above (object / function), which will then be used to update the state. Uncaught errors are stored in state under the key handlerError. Alternatively, your handler can use the async/await syntax.
  • An iterator, such as one made by using a generator function. Each object passed to yield may be one of the above (object / function / promise).
  • An array of any of the above (object / function / promise / iterator).
  • Or optionally, nothing.

There are some handlers for special tasks, specifically:

initial(props) => object (required)

Return initial state to start off with, a la React’s initialState. Passed props.

load(props: object, prevProps: object?, { handlers: object }) => object | Promise<object> | void (optional)

Passed the current props and the previous props. Return new state, a Promise returning new state, or nothing. You may also use a generator function (function * load(props, prevProps)) and yield state changes.

If this is the first time loaded or if being reloaded, then prevProps is null.

Usual pattern is to check for either prevProps being null or if the prop of interest has changed from its previous value:

export const load = async ({ id }, prevProps) => {
  if (!prevProps || id !== prevProps.id) {
    return { item: await loadItem(id) }
  }
}

Your load handler will be called in React’s lifecycle: componentDidMount and componentWillReceiveProps.

Argument enhancers

Handler arguments can be adjusted, to cover many common cases. Pass them to the adjustArgs option. The following enhancers are built-in:

extractFromDOM(args: array) => newArgs: array

import extractFromDOM from 'react-organism/lib/adjustArgs/extractFromDOM'

Extract values from DOM, specifically:

  • For events as the first argument, extracts value, checked, and name from event.target. Additionally, if target has data- attributes, these will also be extracted in camelCase from its dataset. Suffixing data- attributes with _number will convert value to a number (instead of string) using parseFloat, and drop the suffix. Handler will receive these extracted values in an object as the first argument, followed by the original arguments.
  • For submit events, extracts values of <input> fields in a <form>. Handler will receive the values keyed by the each input’s name attribute, followed by the original arguments. Pass the handler to the onSubmit prop of the <form>. Form must have data-extract attribute present. To clear the form after submit, add data-reset to the form.

Why instead of Redux?

  • Like Redux, separate your state management from rendering
  • Unlike Redux, avoid loose strings for identifying actions
  • Redux encourages having state in one bundle, whereas dynamic import() encourages breaking apps into sections
  • Easier to reuse functionality, as action handlers are totally encapsulated
  • No ability to reach across to the other side of your state tree
  • Encourages composition of components
  • Supports async and await in any action
  • Supports generator functions to allow multiple state changes — great for animation
  • No switch statements
  • No boilerplate or additional helper libraries needed