Hello π,
In this article we are going to build own react-redux
with the help of context
api
Why we need redux in react ?
In react we need to share data between components. It will be very difficult with react state with the help of redux we can make it simple.
Here is an example.
const Root = () => {
const [label, setLabel] = useState()
return <div>
<p>{label}</p>
<Parent setLabel={setLabel}/>
</div>
};
const Parent = props => {
return <Child {...props} />;
};
const Child = props => {
return <Subchild {...props} />;
};
const Subchild = ({ children, setLabel }) => {
return <div>
<button onClick={() => setLabel('Hello')}>Set Label</button>
<p>{children}</p>
</div>
};
In the above example app has multiple levels Root -> Parent -> Child -> Subchild
we are displaying label in Root
level and we are setting label
in Subchild level. For this we need to pass setLabel
callback till Subchild level from root unnecessarily. Parent and Child has setLabel
function but those components are not doing anything with that. Here it is small example so it is okay think how can we manage these things in large real time app π€
Solution
REDUX
How redux helps?
Redux will maintain a store (global state) independently. We can access and mutate the redux data directly from the component. For the above problem we will link Root
and Subchild
components with redux so those two components will have an access for global store so Root
component can access the label at the same time Subchild
component can set the label no need to pass anything through Parent
and Child
Let's jump into development part π
First we need to create context for global state
const {
createContext,
} = require("react");
const context = createContext();
const { Provider, Consumer } = context;
We created context successfully now lets create combineReducers
along with dummy reducers for now
const reducer1 = (state, action) => {
switch (action.type) {
case "INSERT_X":
return { ...state, x: action.data };
case "DELETE_X":
return { ...state, x: null };
default:
return { ...state };
}
};
const reducer2 = (state, action) => {
switch (action.type) {
case "INSERT_Y":
return { ...state, y: action.data };
case "DELETE_Y":
return { ...state, y: null };
default:
return { ...state };
}
};
// zip is util function
const zip = (list1, list2) => {
var obj = {};
for (let i = 0; i < list1.length; i++) {
obj[list1[i]] = list2[i];
}
return obj;
};
const combineReducers = (reducers) => {
return (state, action) => {
const _reducers = Object.keys(reducers);
const _state = Object.keys(reducers).map((reducer) => {
return reducers[reducer](state[reducer], action);
});
return zip(_reducers, _state);
};
};
Next we need to create Provider
method to init store in App and connect
method to consume it on component
const StoreProvider = ({ children }) => {
const rootReducer = combineReducers({ reducer1, reducer2 });
const [state, dispatch] = useReducer(rootReducer, {});
return <Provider value={{ state, dispatch }}>{children}</Provider>;
};
const connect = (mapStateTopProps, mapDispatchToProps) => {
return (Component) => (props) => {
return (
<Consumer>
{({ state, dispatch }) => {
const dispatchProps = mapDispatchToProps(dispatch);
const stateProps = mapStateTopProps(state);
return <Component {...props} {...stateProps} {...dispatchProps} />;
}}
</Consumer>
);
};
};
Hook approach to mutate and access the state
const useSelector = (fn) => {
const { state } = useContext(context);
return fn(state);
};
const useDispatch = (fn) => {
const { dispatch } = useContext(context);
return dispatch;
};
Finally the code will be like this
const {
useContext,
createContext,
useReducer,
useState,
useEffect
} = require("react");
const context = createContext();
const { Provider, Consumer } = context;
const reducer1 = (state, action) => {
switch (action.type) {
case "INSERT_X":
return { ...state, x: action.data };
case "DELETE_X":
return { ...state, x: null };
default:
return { ...state };
}
};
const reducer2 = (state, action) => {
switch (action.type) {
case "INSERT_Y":
return { ...state, y: action.data };
case "DELETE_Y":
return { ...state, y: null };
default:
return { ...state };
}
};
const zip = (list1, list2) => {
var obj = {};
for (let i = 0; i < list1.length; i++) {
obj[list1[i]] = list2[i];
}
return obj;
};
const combineReducers = (reducers) => {
return (state, action) => {
const _reducers = Object.keys(reducers);
const _state = Object.keys(reducers).map((reducer) => {
return reducers[reducer](state[reducer], action);
});
return zip(_reducers, _state);
};
};
const Store = ({ children }) => {
const rootReducer = combineReducers({ reducer1, reducer2 });
const [state, dispatch] = useReducer(rootReducer, {});
return <Provider value={{ state, dispatch }}>{children}</Provider>;
};
export const connect = (mapStateTopProps, mapDispatchToProps) => {
return (Component) => (props) => {
return (
<Consumer>
{({ state, dispatch }) => {
const dispatchProps = mapDispatchToProps(dispatch);
const stateProps = mapStateTopProps(state);
return <Component {...props} {...stateProps} {...dispatchProps} />;
}}
</Consumer>
);
};
};
export const useSelector = (fn) => {
const { state } = useContext(context);
return fn(state);
};
export const useDispatch = (fn) => {
const { dispatch } = useContext(context);
return dispatch;
};
export default Store;
We are done with redux part ππ»
To use this in your app wrap your root component with StoreProvider
and use connect
in the components where you want to consume the state
Here is sandbox link with example
Thank you!!!!
π¨π¨β οΈβ οΈ : Donβt use this code in production. This is just for educational purposes.
You can now extend your support by buying me a Coffee.
Top comments (5)
This is a cool project to grasp how some of the internals of react-redux work, but please make sure to never do it in production.
For one, this imitates a very old style of Redux and modern Redux would be only a fraction of that code (and a lot more readable).
Also, React-Redux manages subscriptions very differently internally. Context is not suited for this and will lead to performance issues once your state starts growing. For more info on that, see dev.to/javmurillo/react-context-al...
To learn modern Redux, please take a look at the official tutorial: redux.js.org/tutorials/essentials/...
Or for just a quick overview of what changed a few years ago: redux.js.org/tutorials/fundamental...
Yes this is not for production just for educational purpose. The reason why I created is when I was learning react. I didnβt understand how redux handle state. Later with the help of context i was able to build on my own. So I thought my learning would help others to understand internal things
Cheers!
Yup, it's perfectly fine for that :)
With recoil I have everything even cleaner and more organized.
Thanks.