novux
lets you to write Redux code simpler & faster by using an opinionated reducer generator.
- less boilerplate: instead of having to write and maintain dozens of actions creators, simply change state using two actions,
update
orreset
. - less maintenance: reduce the number of tests you have to write to only focus on business logic — all reducer action creator tests are handled by
novux
- code faster: easily declare and describe state changes to make coding & collaboration easier, even as state changes become more complex
npm install novux
npm run build
npm run test
import createReducer from 'novux';
const initialStates = {
user: {
name: 'Michael',
company: 'Nova Credit'
},
};
const userReducer = createReducer('user', initialStates.user);
novux
lets you run Redux by handling only two actions: update
and reset
.
update
is used to update the state of a single reducer given an object.
reset
is used to reset the reducer to its initial state or reset specific keys to their initial values.
Both actions have the following signature:
actionName(reducerName, tag, options)
- actionName: how is the state being changed?
- reducerName: which reducer is being affected?
- tag: why is this change relevant?
- options: what values are affected?
Example:
import { update, reset } from 'novux';
dispatch(update('user', 'Change username', {
username: 'Stash',
}));
dispatch(reset('user', 'Reset the initial state', {
reset: [],
}));
dispatch(reset('user', 'Reset specific keys', {
reset: ['username'],
}));
// dispatch is provided by redux: http://redux.js.org/docs/api/Store.html#dispatchaction
When reseting state, you can also pass in paths in dot notation
dispatch(reset('user', 'Reset paths', {
reset: ['address.street'],
}));
// if a path is defined in the initial state, it will be reset to its initial value
// if a path is undefined in the initial state, `novux` will seek the longest sub path defined in the initial state and reset
Using the tag
string instead of an action name to define a state change lets you describe state changes programatically.
The tag is included in the updated state under the key _lastAction
, allowing you to keep track of what action last affected a specific reducer in your dev tools.
const consent = true;
const { username } = getState().user;
dispatch(update('user', `${username} ${consent ? 'grants' : 'revokes'} consent`, {
consent,
}));
novux
can help you declare increasingly complicated sets of state updates in simple and consistent ways.
const toggleConsent = consent => (dispatch, getState) => {
const { username } = getState().user;
dispatch(update('user', `${username} ${consent ? 'grants' : 'revokes'} consent`, {
consent,
}));
if (!consent) {
dispatch(update('app', `Show error & disable button`, {
error: {
msg: 'You need to grant consent to proceed',
type: 'flash',
},
button: { able: false }
}));
}
};
// this example makes use of redux-thunk to easily access dispatch and state