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Introducing React hook for stateful CRUD 🚀️‍🔥
As a react developer, one of the challenging thing is managing the collection of data in the state and manupulating it. Performing stateful CRUD and maintaining is quite a tedious process. While working with redux-toolkit, I found createEntityAdapter
method, which has a very nice API to perform operation in a stateful data. So, I thought about wrapping the createEntityAdapter
method with a hook which provides all the method required to perform state manipulation.
useStatefulAdapter is the hook over createEntityAdapter method provided by @redux/toolkit
that helps to maintain CRUD operation of the state.
useStatefulAdapter
provides an API to manipulate the state without worrying about handling all the states.
Reduces boilerplate for creating reducers that manage state.
Provides performant CRUD operations for managing stateful entity collections.
const [state, handler, { selectById }] = useStatefulAdapter<{
id: string;
text: string;
}>({
name: 'my-adapter',
selectId: (item) => item.id,
});
npm i use-stateful-adapter
or
yarn add use-stateful-adapter
The initialisation
import * as React from 'react';
import useStatefulAdapter from 'use-stateful-adapter';
export default function App() {
const [state, handler, { selectById }] = useStatefulAdapter<{
id: string;
text: string;
}>({
name: 'my-adapter',
selectId: (item) => item.id,
});
}
useStatefulAdapter
returns [
currentState
,
handler
,
selectors
]
-
addOne
: Add one entity to the collection -
addMany
: Add multiple entities to the collection -
addAll
: Replace current collection with provided collection -
removeOne
: Remove one entity from the collection -
removeMany
: Remove multiple entities from the collection, by id or by predicate -
removeAll
: Clear entity collection -
updateOne
: Update one entity in the collection -
updateMany
: Update multiple entities in the collection -
upsertOne
: Add or Update one entity in the collection -
upsertMany
: Add or Update multiple entities in the collection -
map
: Update multiple entities in the collection by defining a map function, similar to Array.map
-
selectById(id:string):void
: Select item by ID
import * as React from 'react';
import useStatefulAdapter from '../src';
export default function App() {
const [state, handler, { selectById }] = useStatefulAdapter<{
id: string;
text: string;
}>({
name: 'my-adapter',
selectId: (item) => item.id,
});
const [currentId, setCurrentId] = React.useState<string | null>(null);
const [todo, setTodo] = React.useState('');
const handleSubmit = React.useCallback(
(e) => {
e.preventDefault();
if (currentId) {
handler.updateOne({
id: currentId,
changes: {
text: todo,
},
});
setCurrentId(null);
} else {
handler.addOne({
id: String(Math.random()),
text: todo,
});
}
setTodo('');
},
[handler, todo]
);
const currentValue = React.useMemo(() => {
return selectById(currentId!);
}, [currentId]);
React.useEffect(() => {
if (!currentValue) return;
setTodo(currentValue.text);
}, [currentValue]);
return (
<form onSubmit={handleSubmit} className="App">
<input
key={currentId}
name="todo"
value={todo}
onChange={(e) => setTodo(e.currentTarget.value)}
placeholder="Add Todo"
type="text"
/>
<button type="button" onClick={handler.removeAll}>
Remove All
</button>
{currentId && <div>Currently editing {currentId}</div>}
{state.map((item) => (
<React.Fragment key={item.id}>
<li>{item.text}</li>
<button type="button" onClick={() => handler.removeOne(item.id)}>
Delete
</button>
<button type="button" onClick={() => setCurrentId(item.id)}>
Edit
</button>
</React.Fragment>
))}
</form>
);
}
with ❤️ from Asim
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