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use-state-snapshots

v0.0.3

Published

A React hook to keep track of state changes for undo/redo functionality.

Downloads

29

Readme

Demo

https://codesandbox.io/s/use-state-snapshots-i6fuq

Features

  • Drop-in replacement for useState including support for functional updates and lazy initial state.
  • Three ways to track changes:
    • Automatically create new snapshots at regular intervals.
    • Automatically create a snapshot for every single change to state.
    • Only create snapshots for specific changes to state.
  • Snapshots include timestamps and ID's so you can display a timeline of changes.
  • Configurable limit for the number of snapshots to keep.
  • Flow and TypeScript declarations included.
  • Zero dependencies.

Installation

Yarn:

yarn add use-state-snapshots

NPM:

npm install use-state-snapshots

Usage

import React from "react";
import useStateSnapshots from "use-state-snapshots";

const MyComponent = () => {
  const [state, setState, pointer, setPointer] = useStateSnapshots("Hello");
  return (
    <div>
      <textarea
        value={state}
        onChange={event => {
          setState(event.target.value);
        }}
      />
      <button
        onClick={() => {
          setPointer(pointer - 1);
        }}
      >
        Undo
      </button>
      <button
        onClick={() => {
          setPointer(pointer + 1);
        }}
      >
        Redo
      </button>
    </div>
  );
};

API

useStateSnapshots

const [state, setState, pointer, setPointer, snapshots] = useStateSnapshots(
  initialState,
  delay,
  limit
);

The initialState argument and the state value behave exactly as they do for the useState hook.

The delay argument is the number of milliseconds to wait before automatically creating a new snapshot. When set to false the automatic snapshots behaviour is disabled and when set to 0 a new snapshot will be created every time setState is called. Default value: 2000.

The limit argument is the number of snapshots to keep. When the limit is reached the oldest snapshot will be removed before when adding a new one. Default value: Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER.

const { id, state, firstChange, lastChange } = snapshots[pointer];

The pointer value returned is the index of the current snapshot in snapshots.

Along with state each snapshot has a unique id as well as firstChange and lastChange timestamps indicating when the earliest and most recent changes in that snapshot occurred (these are generated with Date.now()).

setState

setState(newState, forceSnapshot);

The setState function works just as described in the useState documentation, with the exception of an additional forceSnapshot argument. When the forceSnapshot argument is true a new snapshot will be created irrespective of the amount of time that has passed since the last snapshot was created.

setPointer

setPointer(index);

The index argument is the index of the snapshot the snapshots list you want to restore. If a value less than 0 or greater than the length of the snapshots list it will be automatically clamped to the lowest (0) or highest (snapshots.length - 1) allowed value.

Functional Updates

Both setState and setPointer accept functional updates as explained in the useState documentation.

Alternatives

Roadmap

  • Document browser compatibility.
  • Add tests.
  • Create a useReducerSnapshots hook.