lore-hook-reducers

A lore hook that creates Redux reducers

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import loreHookReducers from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/lore-hook-reducers';
</script>

README

lore-hook-reducers

Purpose

Loads all user defined reducers, which will override any blueprints previously created.

The result is exposed on lore.reducers.

Dependant Hooks

None, but needs to be run after the reducerBlueprints hook or else the blueprints will override the user defined reducers.

Needed improvements

Suggestions are welcome.

Example Usage

Given a project where a custom todo.count reducer has been declared like so:

src
|-reducers
  |-todo
    |-count.js

This hook will find it and expose it on lore.reducers.todo.count and make sure it's combined into the Redux store.

Reducers should follow this format:

// file: src/reducers/todo/count.js

module.exports = function count(state, action) {
   state = state || 0;

   switch (action.type) {
     case ActionTypes.ADD_TODO:
       return state + 1;

     default:
       return nextState
   }
 };;

reducer blueprints

Purpose

If enabled, will create default reducers for all models that cover basic find operations - find by query, find by id, and find by cid.

Iterates through all models in lore.models and creates reducers for all of them.

Dependant Hooks

Depends on the models hook being run first as it iterations through lore.models.

Needed improvements

  1. Needs to support pagination.
  2. There should be an option to turn off blueprints.
  3. all needs to be renamed to find as it's more accurate (all isn't all, it will often be only a pagninated subset of data found based on some query)
  4. There's a bug preventing resources that use a number as a unique id from being stored correctly.
  5. Should support equality operators, like "find todos that were completed before some data"

Example Usage

Given a model called todo, this hook will create the following reducers:

  • lore.reducers.todo.all
  • lore.reducers.todo.byId
  • lore.reducers.todo.byCid

The reducers are not meant to be accessed or used directly. Redux handles that.

Interfaces

byId

This reducer has a standard Redux format:

function byId(state, action) {...})

It's purpose is to listen for the standard CRUD ActionTypes (ADD_TODO, UPDATE_TODO, REMOVE_TODO, and FETCH_TODOS) and store the results in a dictionary where the key is the model id. If a model doesn't have an id (which happens during optimistic creates) the model is not stored in the dictionary. Keeping track of the models that only exist on the client side is the job of the byCid reducer.

Here is an example of the dictionary this reducer returns:

{
  '1': {
    id: '1',
    cid: 'c1',
    data: {..some data..},
    state: "RESOLVED",
    error: {}
  },
  '2': {
    ...
  }
}

byCid

This reducer has a standard Redux format:

// standard reducer arguments
function byCid(state, action) {...})

It's purpose is to listen for the standard CRUD ActionTypes (ADD_TODO, UPDATE_TODO, REMOVE_TODO, and FETCH_TODOS) and store the results in a dictionary where the key is the model cid. There should never be a situation where a model does not have a cid.

Here is an example of the dictionary this reducer returns (note the c2 resource that has no id and is currently being created):

{
  'c1': {
    id: '1',
    cid: 'c1',
    data: {..some data..},
    state: "RESOLVED",
    error: {}
  },
  'c2': {
    id: null,
    cid: 'c2',
    data: {..some data..},
    state: "CREATING",
    error: {}
  }
}

all

This reducer has a modified Redux format as it requires an additional third 'options' arguments that includes the results from the byId and byCid reducers stored in a nextState object.

var _byId = byId(state.byId, action);
var _byCid = byCid(state.byCid, action);
var _all = all(state.all, action, {
  nextState: {
    byId: _byId,
    byCid: _byCid
  }
});

It's purpose is to store collections of resources group by a common query, and listens for the ActionType FETCH_TODOS. If new data is created that matches the query criteria for one of the lists, it will also make sure that resource is included inside that list.

Here is an example of the dictionary this reducer returns:

{
  '{}': {
    state: "RESOLVED",
    data: [
      {
        id: '1',
        cid: 'c1',
        data: {
          color: 'red'
        },
        state: "RESOLVED",
        error: {}
      },
      {
        id: '2',
        cid: 'c2',
        data: {
          color: 'blue'
        },
        state: "RESOLVED",
        error: {}
      }
    ],
    error: {}
  },
  '{"color":"blue"}': {
    state: "RESOLVED",
    data: [
      {
        id: '2',
        cid: 'c2',
        data: {
          color: 'blue'
        },
        state: "RESOLVED",
        error: {}
      }
    ],
    error: {}
  }
}

The keys for the dictionary are the JSON.stringify() version of the query. For example, a called to lore.connect that looks like this:

lore.connect(function(getState, props) {
  return {
    todos: getState('todo.all', {
      where: {
        color: 'blue'
      }
    })
  }
})

Specifies the query {color: 'blue'}. It's that query that gets passed to JSON.stringify() and stored as the dictionary key. When new data shows in either the byId or byCid dictionaries that are new (don't currently exist in todo.all) they are inspected to see whether the any of the stored queries match the data, and if so that data is inserted into the collection in the dictionary.