SoloX is a React state management library that focuses on:
- Immutable data
- No/minimal boilerplate
- Low learning curve
- Does not dictate architecture - can have global or local state
- Results are easy to unit test
- Native typescript support
If you're familiar with MobX, this library "feels" a lot like it. You might call it a "poor man's MobX", or perhaps a "MobX superlegerra". The upside is that this library is increadibly small (doubly so if you're already using immer, it's only dependency) and easy to use, and you don't need to worry about wrapping your React components with observer
higher-order components as you would in MobX. The biggest downside is that you need to be a bit more explicit about when you want to update state, but thanks to the immer library, updates will still be done as if the state is a regular mutable javascript object.
If you're interested in the implementation details of SoloX, they're documented in this blog post. The source code is well under 200 lines of code, including comments.
- Whenever you want to update state, it has to be done inside a
state.update(...)
block. - Whenever you want to read state directly from a store in a React render function, or read computed values from a controller you must wrap the read in a
useControllerState()
hook. (Although you can read state directly from the store in a click handler or simlar "action".)
Let's write a todo app! First, we're going to define some state we want to store as a simple Typescript interface:
interface Task {
task: string;
completed: boolean;
assignee: string | null;
}
interface TodosState {
todos: Task[];
}
Now we're going to create a "controller" which contains a copy of this state, and some actions we can perform on the state:
import { ImmutableModelStore } from 'solox';
class TodoController {
// Create our "model".
public state = new ImmutableModelStore<TodosState>({ todos: [] });
// Generate derived state from the model.
get completedTodosCount() {
return this.state.current.todos.filter((todo) => todo.completed === true).length;
}
// An action to add a new todo.
addTodo = (task: string) => {
this.state.update((state) => {
state.todos.push({
task,
completed: false,
assignee: null,
});
});
};
}
const todoController = new TodoController();
Our controller has some state stored in this.state
, which we can read from this.state.current
(very similar to a React ref). We also defined an addTodo()
action. The addTodo()
action calls into this.state.update()
to update the state. Inside the update()
function, you can treat your state as mutable state (thanks to the magic of the immer library). Trying to mutate this.state.current
directly will result in an error.
Now we can add TODOs to our controller:
todoController.addTodo('Buy milk');
todoController.addTodo('Mow lawn');
console.log(`There are ${todoController.completedTodosCount} completed TODOs.`);
We can also subscribe to the todoController
to find out when its state changes:
todoController.state.subscribe((state) => {
console.log(`There are ${state.todos.length} TODOs, total.`);
});
When we want to use this in a React component, we can either use the global controller we created above, or we can create a local controller with useLocalController()
. Either way, though, the todoController
instance never changes - only todoController.state.current
changes when the state is updated. This is very similar to ref
in React - changing the contents of the ref won't cause the component to re-render. This means that if we want this React component to update when the state changes, we need to subscribe to the state with useControllerState()
.
import { useControllerState, useLocalController } from 'solox';
export const MyComponent: React.FC<unknown> = () => {
const todoController = useLocalController(() => new TodoController());
const state = useControllerState(todoController.state);
return (
<div>
<ul>
{state.todos.map((todo, index) => (
<li key={`todo-${index}`}>{todo.task}</li>
))}
</ul>
</div>
);
};
Once we subscribe to the state, we can either pass that state down to children (which will cause them to re-render when that state changes) or we can pass the whole controller down (or via a context) and then useControllerState()
can be used to select specific values from the state, and only re-render if they change, or to select derived values from the controller:
import isShallowEqual from '@wordpress/is-shallow-equal';
export const MyComponent: React.FC<unknown> = () => {
const todoController = useLocalController(() => new TodoController());
// Only re-render this component if state.todos or completedTodosCount changes.
const { todos, completedTodosCount } = useControllerState(
controller.state,
(state) => {
return {
todos: state.todos,
completedTodosCount: todoController.completedTodosCount,
};
},
isShallowEqual
);
return (
<div>
<ul>
{state.todos.map((todo, index) => (
<li key={`todo-${index}`}>{todo.task}</li>
))}
</ul>
</div>
);
};
Your actions are just functions; they can be async, they can take any number of parameters, and they can return any value. The only restriction here is that the function you pass to update()
has to be synchronous. The trick is to make multiple calls into update()
as your async action progresses:
class TodoController {
// An action to load todos from the server.
loadTodos = async () => {
this.state.update((state) => {
state.loading = true;
});
const todoResponse = await fetch('/todos');
const todos = await todoResponse.json();
this.state.update((state) => {
state.loading = false;
state.todos = todos;
});
};
}
Create a new ImmutableModelStore.
Return the current state.
Calls fn(state)
. fn
must be a synchronous function, which should make any updates to the state required, as if the state were regular mutable state. When the function returns, ImmutableModelStore.current
will be updated with the new state.
Note that you can nest calls to update()
- the state will not be changed until the outermost call to update()
returns.
subscribe(listener)
will call listener(state)
whenever the state updates. subscribe()
returns an unsubscribe
function that can be called to unsubscribe.
useControllerState(store)
is a React hook which will subscribe to a store and return the state of the store whenever it changes. You can select an individual value by passing a selector:
const todos = useControllerState(todoController, (state) => state.todos);
If you return multiple values, you can also pass an optional isEqual
function, in which cased the component will only be re-rendered if subsequent calls to the selector return different values when compared with isEqual
. If isEqual
is not provided, selected data will be compared with ===
.
const { name, age } = useControllerState(
useController,
(state) => ({ name: state.name, age: state.age }),
isShallowEqual
);
Convenience hook for creating a new local controller. Calling this is equivalent to calling:
const [controller] = useState(initializer);
Copyright 2021 Jason Walton