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react-redux-simple

v0.8.0

Published

A selector friendly shortcut for React-Redux

Downloads

30

Readme

Redux Redux Simple

npm version Build Status

An alternative way to connect React components to a Redux store.

import React from "react";
import { connect } from "react-redux-simple";
import * as selectors from "./selectors";
import * as actions from "./actions";

class Counter extends React.Component {
  static selectors = {
    count: selectors.getCount
  }

  static actions = {
    inc: actions.increment,
    dec: actions.decrement
  }

  render() {
    let { count, inc, dec } = this.props;

    return (
      <div>
        <button onClick={dec}>-</button>
        <span>{count}</span>
        <button onClick={inc}>+</button>
      </div>
    );
  }
}

export default connect(Counter)

Or with a functional component:

const Counter = ({ count, inc, dec }) => (
  <div>
    <button onClick={dec}>-</button>
    <span>{count}</span>
    <button onClick={inc}></button>
  </div>
);

Counter.selectors = {
  count: selectors.getCount
};

Counter.actions = {
  inc: actions.increment,
  dec: actions.decrement
};

export default connect(Counter)

Getting Started

You'll need to install both this package and react-redux:

npm install react-redux react-redux-simple

Selectors

An optional mapping of prop names to selectors (a function which takes the state and returns a value).

static selectors = {
  count: state => state.count
}

If your selectors depend on the components own props, then selectors can be a function instead.

static selectors = props => ({
  count: state => state.count * props.multiplier
})

A common pattern is to name your selectors and group them in their own file (or colocate them with reducers).

import * as ToolSelectors from "./selectors/tool";
import * as ViewSelectors from "./selectors/view";

class Artboard extends Component {
  static selectors = {
    tool: ToolSelectors.getCurrentTool,
    width: ViewSelectors.getVisibleWidth,
    height: ViewSelectors.getVisibleHeight
  };
}

Actions

An optional mapping of prop names to action creators (a function which returns an action).

static actions = {
  increment: amount => ({ type: "INCREMENT", amount })
}

Another common pattern is to name and group actions in related files, then import them into the components that need them.

import * as ToolActions from "./actions/tool";
import * as ViewActions from "./actions/view";

class Artboard extends Component {
  static actions = {
    setTool: ToolActions.setCurrentTool,
    setWidth: ViewActions.setVisibleWidth,
    setHeight: ViewActions.setVisibleHeight
  };
}

What about <Provide />?

You still need to make sure that your components have access to the store. The easiest way to do this is to have a <Provide /> component at the root of your component tree.

import { Provide } from "react-redux"; // or from "react-redux-simple";

ReactDOM.render(
  <Provide store={myStore}>
    <App />
  </Provide>
);

What about mergeProps and options?

This is designed to be a stupidly simple wrapper, if you need more control you can just use the React-Redux version of connect for a component with specific needs.