Package Exports
- react-parm
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Readme
react-parm
Handle react classes with more functional purity
Table of contents
Summary
react-parm is a thin abstraction providing partial-application methods that allow you to handle react classes with much more functional purity. This allows for better encapsulation, greater separation of concerns, and simplified testing. When combined with destructuring, it also improves readability and comprehension.
Usage
import React from "react";
import { createElementRef, createMethod } from "react-parm";
export const componentDidMount = ({ getFoo, props }) =>
props.shouldGetFoo && getFoo();
export const onClickGetBar = ({ getBar }, [event]) =>
getBar(event.currentTarget.dataset.baz);
export default class App extends React.Component {
// lifecycle methods
componentDidMount = createMethod(this, componentDidMount);
// refs
element = null;
// instance methods
onClickGetBar = createMethod(this, onClickGetBar);
render() {
return (
<button
data-baz="quz"
onClick={this.onClickGetBar}
ref={createElementRef(this, "element")}
>
Go get bar!
</button>
);
}
}Methods
createMethod
Create a functional instance or lifecycle method, which will receive the full instance as the first parameter.
createMethod(instance: ReactComponent, method: function, ...extraArgs: Array
import React from "react";
import { createMethod } from "react-parm";
export const componentDidMount = ({ setState }) =>
setState(() => ({ isMounted: true }));
export const onClickDoThing = ({ props }, [event], [withStuff]) =>
props.doThing(event.currentTarget, withStuff);
export default class App extends Component {
state = {
isMounted: false
};
componentDidMount = createMethod(this, componentDidMount);
onClickDoThing = createMethod(this, onClickDoThing, true);
render() {
return (
<div>
<h3>Welcome to doing the thing</h3>
<button onClick={this.onClickDoThing}>Do the thing</button>
</div>
);
}
}createRender
Create a functional render method, which will receive the props as the first parameter, and the full instance as the second parameter.
createRender(instance: ReactComponent, render: function): (props: Object, instance: ReactComponent) => ReactElement
import React from "react";
import { createMethod, createRender } from "react-parm";
export const componentDidMount = ({ setState }) =>
setState(() => ({ isMounted: true }));
export const DoTheThing = ({ doThing }. { state: { isMounted } }) => {
return (
<div>
<h3>Welcome to doing the mounted thing</h3>
<span>Am I mounted? {isMounted ? 'YES!' : 'No :('}</span>
<button onClick={doThing}>Do the thing</button>
</div>
);
};
export default class App extends Component {
state = {
isMounted: false
};
componentDidMount = createMethod(this, componentDidMount);
onClickDoThing = createMethod(this, onClickDoThing, true);
render = createRender(this, DoTheThing);
}NOTE: The difference in signature from createMethod is both for common-use purposes, but also because it allows linting tools to appropriately lint for PropTypes.
createComponent
Create a functional component with all available instance-based methods, values, and refs a Component class has.
createComponent(render: function, options: Object): ReactComponent
import React from "react";
import { createComponent } from "react-parm";
export const state = {
isMounted: false
};
export const componentDidMount = ({ setState }) =>
setState(() => ({ isMounted: true }));
export const onClickDoThing = ({ props }, [event], [withStuff]) =>
props.doThing(event.currentTarget, withStuff);
export const DoTheThing = ({ doThing }, { onClickDoThing }) => (
<div>
<h3>Welcome to doing the thing</h3>
<button onClick={doThing && onClickDoThing}>Do the thing</button>
</div>
);
DoTheThing.displayName = "DoTheThing";
DoTheThing.propTypes = {
doThing: PropTypes.func.isRequired
};
export default createComponent(DoTheThing, {
componentDidMount,
onClickDoThing,
state
});The component will be parmed with createRender, all methods passed in options will be parmed with createMethod, and all other values will be assigned to the instance. There are also two additional properties that are treated outside the context of assignment to the instance:
isPure=> shouldPureComponentbe used to construct the underlying component class instead ofComponent(defaults tofalse)getInitialState=> if a method is passed, then it is parmed and used to derive the initial state instead of the staticstateproperty
createComponentRef
Create a method that will assign the Component requested to an instance value using a ref callback.
createComponentRef(instance: ReactComponent, ref: string): (component: HTMLElement | ReactComponent) => void
import React from "react";
import { createElementRef } from "react-parm";
export default class App extends Component {
component = null;
render() {
return (
<SomeOtherComponent ref={createComponentRef(this, "component")}>
We captured the component instance!
</SomeOtherComponent>
);
}
}The ref string value passed will be the key that will be used in the assignment to the instance.
createElementRef
Create a method that will assign the DOM node of the component requested to an instance value using a ref callback.
createElementRef(instance: ReactComponent, ref: string): (component: HTMLElement | ReactComponent) => void
import React from "react";
import { createElementRef } from "react-parm";
export default class App extends Component {
element = null;
render() {
return (
<SomeOtherComponent ref={createElementRef(this, "element")}>
We found the DOM node!
</SomeOtherComponent>
);
}
}The ref string value passed will be the key that will be used in the assignment to the instance.
createCombinedRef
Create a method that will assign both the DOM node of the component requested and the component itself to a namespaced instance value using a ref callback.
createCombinedRef(instance: ReactComponent, ref: string): (component: HTMLElement | ReactComponent) => void
import React from "react";
import { createCombinedRef } from "react-parm";
export default class App extends Component {
someOtherComponent = null;
render() {
return (
<SomeOtherComponent ref={createCombinedRef(this, "someOtherComponent")}>
I have the best of both worlds! this.someOtherComponent will look like "{component: SomeOtherComponent, element: div}".
</SomeOtherComponent>
);
}
}The value assigned will be an object with component and element properties, which reflect the component and the DOM node for that component respectively. The ref string value passed will be the key that will be used in the assignment to the instance.
Why parm?
PARM is an acronym, standing for Partial-Application React Method. Also, why not parm? It's delicious.
Development
Standard stuff, clone the repo and npm install dependencies. The npm scripts available:
build=> run rollup to build development and productiondistfilesdev=> run webpack dev server to run example app / playgroundlint=> run ESLint against all files in thesrcfolderlint: fix=> runslintwith--fixprepublish=> runsprepublish:compilewhen publishingprepublish:compile=> runlint,test:coverage,transpile:lib,transpile:es, andbuildtest=> run AVA test functions withNODE_ENV=testtest:coverage=> runtestbut withnycfor coverage checkertest:watch=> runtest, but with persistent watchertranspile:lib=> run babel against all files insrcto create files inlibtranspile:es=> run babel against all files insrcto create files ines, preserving ES2015 modules (forpkg.module)