This package is not maintained anymore. This package was for React 15 without React Context. Given the React Context and React Hooks today, this package is no longer needed.
We Redux Users often create smart containers, containers connected to Redux or Flux for reactive interactions, which means changing one elments changes other elements as well. However, in developing view components, putting too many variables into Redux is not a good idea in development.
Let us say the containers connected with Redux as the smart containers, and we need to create some 'foolish' containers that provide reactive actions without Redux. Therefore, we could keep the Redux state neat and clean.
This package provides a createContainer()
method with a similar interface of
Redux's connect, but it is not connected to Redux.
createContainer
creates a Container Component in two steps:
let newContainer = createContainer(defaultState, handlers)(template = (props, state, handlers) => JSX)
In the first step, createContainer(defaultState, handlers)
defines the
container's intial state (defaultState
) and state change methods
(handlers
). In the second step, we map the container's props
, state
and
state change method handlers
to a JSX template.
defaultState : Object
The initialization of the React State;
handlers : { method_name: (...args) => stateChange}
The stateChange
here could be any argument accepted by React's this.setState(stateChange)
,
so (...args) => StateChange
, as values of handlers, could be
(*...args) => newState
(...args) => (prevState, Props) => (newState)
(event, ...args) => {e.persist(); return (prevState, Props)=> (newState); }
template = (props, state, handlers) => JSX
The template to map props
, state
and state change methods handlers
to a React DOM. props
is the props
accepted by the container; state
is the this.state
of the container. handler
are state change methods
More details can be seen in the following Example Code.
ecurry((e, prevState, Props) => {newState})
ecurry
is a curry function to transit SyntheticEvent
from child component
to parent compoents with event.persist()
, which works as
ecurry(f)(e) === (...args) => {e.persist(); f(e,...args)}
These example code snippets could be seen in demo/
. You could run npm run demo
to see the result of following code.
This example shows creating a simple Counter Component with createContainer
import createContainer from 'create-foolish-container';
import React from 'react';
let CounterTemplate = (props, state, handlers) => <div>
<h2>{state.counter}</h2>
<button onClick={handlers.sub}>-</button>
<button onClick={handlers.add}>+</button>
</div>;
let CounterContainer = createContainer({ counter: 0.5, },
{ add: () => (prevState) => ({ counter: prevState.counter + 1, }),
sub: () => (prevState) => ({ counter: prevState.counter - 1, }),
})(CounterTemplate);
This example shows the usage of eccury
, a curry wrapper with e.persist
of the React;
import createContainer, { ecurry } from 'create-foolish-container';
import React from 'react';
let InputContainer = createContainer({ cookies: 3, },
{ change: ecurry((e, prevState) => ({ cookies: parseInt(e.target.value), })),
}
)((props, state, handlers) => <p>
When you eat
<input type="number" onChange={handlers.change} value={state.cookies} /> cookies,
you consume {state.cookies * 50} calories.
</p>
);
When the <input />
3 cookies are changed, the amount of consumed calories is also changed.