Simple, yet powerful, epics built on top of Redux-Observable.
This library builds on top of redux-observable to help you implement epics that are easy to understand and testable.
Our experience shows that RxJS by itself can be hard to learn, understand and manage. RxJS-Redux provides with a simple and consistent pattern for building epics that leverage the power of RxJS while keeping the epics simple.
RxJS-Redux is for RxJS and Redux, what react-redux is for React and Redux. So much so, that it can be explained with a rehashed description of react-redux:
rxjs-redux is conceptually pretty simple. It subscribes to the stream of Redux state, checks to see if the data your epic wants has changed, and re-executes the business logic of your epic.
If you're using react-redux for your UI, using rxjs-redux for Epics should be a no-brainer, thanks to the familiar approach.
This has peer dependencies of [email protected], [email protected] and [email protected], which will have to be installed as well.
npm install --save rxjs-redux
or
yarn add rxjs-redux
This library integrates out of the box with redux-observable
.
import { connect, stateObserverAsEpic } from 'rxjs-redux';
import { combineEpics } from 'redux-observable';
const mapStateToProps = (state: State) => ({
property: state.property
});
const mapPropsToAction = (props: Props) => {
if (property === "SPECIAL") {
return { type: "SPECIAL_DETECTED" };
}
return { type: "BORING_PROPERTY", property };
}
const stateObserver = state$ => state$.pipe(
connect(mapStateToProps),
map(mapPropsToAction)
);
combineEpics(
stateObserverAsEpic(stateObserver)
);
const arePropsEqual = (previousProps: Props, currentProps: Props) => {
return previousProps.singleProperty === currentProps.singleProperty;
};
state$.pipe(
connect(mapStateToProps, { arePropsEqual }),
map(mapPropsToAction)
);
const mapPropsToActions = (props: Props) => {
return [...];
}
state$.pipe(
connect(mapStateToProps),
map(mapPropsToActions),
flatMap(actions => from(actions))
);
Use when you need to invoke an asynchronous operation that returns an action - most commonly when calling REST API.
const mapPropsToObservable = (props: Props) => {
return from(returnPromise(props));
}
state$.pipe(
connect(mapStateToProps),
flatMap(mapPropsToObservable)
);
const mapPropsToObservable = (props: Props) => {
return from(returnPromise(props.contextState));
}
const mapStateToStateProps = (state: State) => ({
property: state.property
});
const mapStateToContextProps = (state: State) => ({
contextState: state.contextState
});
// mapPropsToObservable will only be executed when "property" changes
// and the latest value of contextState will be included in Props
state$.pipe(
connect(mapStateToStateProps, mapStateToContextProps),
flatMap(mapPropsToObservable)
);
Sometimes props change faster than the time required to finish async operation. If that happens, it helps to:
- run only one
mapPropsToObservable
at a time (ignoring other prop changes in the meantime) - always make sure
mapPropsToObservable
one final time with the most recent props.
You can get this behaviour by replacing flatMap
operator with auditMap:
import { auditMap } from 'rxjs-redux';
const mapPropsToObservable = (props: Props) => {
return from(returnPromise(props));
}
state$.pipe(
connect(mapStateToProps),
auditMap(mapPropsToObservable)
);
Use when your epic is causing a side effect - eg. setting a cookie or calling a REST API where you don't care about response.
const mapPropsToSideEffect = (obs: Observable<Props>) =>
obs.pipe(
tap(props => { ... }),
ignoreElements()
);
state$.pipe(
connect(mapStateToProps),
mapPropsToSideEffect
);
// Item Epic
const mapItemToProps = (props: ItemProps) => ({
id: props.item.id,
description: props.item.description,
context: pops.context
});
const processItem = (inputProps$: Observable<ItemProps>) =>
itemProps$.pipe(
connect(mapItemPropsToProps),
flatMap(props => {
return { type: "CHANGED_IN_ITEM", id: item.id, id: item.description, context };
})
);
// List Epic
const mapInputToProps = (state: State) => ({
list: state.list,
context: state.context
});
const arePropsEqual = (previousProps: Props, currentProps: Props) => {
return previousProps.list === currentProps.list;
};
state$.pipe(
connect(mapInputToProps),
flatMap(props => {
return from(props.list).map(item => ({
item,
context: props.context
}))
}),
groupBy(item => item.id),
flatMap(processItem)
);
Testing RXJS code can be often quite cumbersome. In most cases this library helps you keep your logic outside of RxJS and test it independently.
When you follow pattern explained by recipes, you can focus your testing on these methods:
- mapInputToProps
- arePropsEqual
- mapPropsToActions, mapPropsToObservable, etc.
Blue Oak Model License
MIT (src/shallowEqual.ts)