react-use-reducers
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0.1.1 • Public • Published

react-use-reducers

A simple, tiny, type-safe way to manage state, without any of the boilerplate of typical reducers.

Install via npm install react-use-reducers

Import via import { useReducers } from 'react-use-reducers';

Simple "Counter" Example

No better documentation than an example:

import { useReducers } from 'react-use-reducers';

const INITIAL = { count: 0 };
type TState = typeof INITIAL;
const REDUCERS = {
  increment: (state: TState, amount = 1) => ({ count: state.count + amount }),
  reset: (state: TState) => INITIAL,
};

function App() {
  const [ state, actions ] = useReducers(REDUCERS, INITIAL);
  // state === { count: 0 }
  // actions === { 
  //               increment(amount?: number): void, 
  //               reset(): void, 
  //             }

  return (
    <div>
      <h1>Count: {state.count}</h1>
      <button onClick={() => actions.increment()}> +1 </button>
      <button onClick={() => actions.increment(99)}> +99 </button>
      <button onClick={actions.reset}> Reset </button>
    </div>
  );
}

useReducers API

const [ state, actions ] = useReducers(reducers, initial);

Parameters

initial - the initial state. Can be a value or a callback that returns a value.

reducers - an object with named reducers. In the above example, there are 2 reducers (increment and reset).

Each reducer takes the previous state, and returns the new state.

Reducers can have additional parameters, like how increment has an optional amount parameter.

Returns

state - the current state

actions - an object with the same shape as the reducers (except without the state parameter)

Each action can be called (along with any additional parameters) to update the state.

For example, actions.reset() or actions.increment(99).

The actions object and methods will ALWAYS be the same reference, so it's safe to omit it from dependency lists. Example:

useEffect(() => {
  const t = setInterval(() => actions.increment(), 1000);
  return () => clearInterval(t);
}, []); // Empty dependency list, because `actions` doesn't change

Things to Note

  • Multiple actions can be called sequentially, and will be applied sequentially. So if you called actions.reset(); actions.increment(5) you'd end up with { count: 5 }
  • Reducers can be "inline" inside the component. They can access properties or other state, if needed. Example:
    function Counter(props) {
      const [ state, actions ] = useReducers({
        increment: (prev) => prev + props.size,
        reset: () => 0
      }, 0);
      // ... 
    }
    

Advanced "To Do App" Example

import { useReducers } from 'react-use-reducers';

const INITIAL = { todos: [] };
const REDUCERS = {
  addTodo(prev, title) {
    return ({
      todos: [
        ...s.todos,
        { title, complete: false }
      ]
    });
  },
  updateTodo(prev, title, complete) {
    return ({
      todos: prev.todos.map(todo => {
        if (todo.title === title) {
          return { ...todo, complete };
        }
        return todo;
      })
    });
  },
  removeTodo(prev, title) {
    return ({
      todos: prev.todos.filter(todo => todo.title !== title),
    });
  },
  reset: (prev) => INITIAL,
};

function TodoApp() {
  const [ state, actions ] = useReducers(REDUCERS, INITIAL);

  // state === {
  //             todos: [ ... ]
  //           }
  // typeof actions === { 
  //                      addTodo(title): void; 
  //                      updateTodo(title, complete): void;
  //                      removeTodo(title): void;  
  //                      reset(): void  
  //                    }

  return <>TODO</>;
}

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npm i react-use-reducers

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0.1.1

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MIT

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  • scott-rippey