Slice and compose redux-type reducers.

Herbert Vojčík 5ac3df6c9c Bump version: 0.3.0. 7 years ago
lib 1339c76e43 Number key treats parent as array. 7 years ago
src 1339c76e43 Number key treats parent as array. 7 years ago
.gitignore de53914b31 Initial commit 7 years ago
LICENSE de53914b31 Initial commit 7 years ago
README.md 1339c76e43 Number key treats parent as array. 7 years ago
package.json 5ac3df6c9c Bump version: 0.3.0. 7 years ago

README.md

redux-sac

Slice and compose redux-type reducers.

subReducer(key, reducer, additionalKey, ...)

Creates a wrapper reducer that call reducer on the substate specified by key. You may use dot notation. Rest of the state is left untouched.

	const r = subReducer("persons", personReducer);

    r({persons: ["John", "Jill"], cars: ["Honda"]}, cityon);
    // => {
    //   persons: personReducer(["John", "Jill"], action), 
    //   cars: ["Honda"]
    // }

Respects redux convention that if no change was made, the identical object should be returned. So in previous case, if personReducer would return the identical array, r would return the state object it was passed in.

If persons were deeper in hierarchy, it could have been created as const r = subReducer("files.persons", personReducer); for example.

You may pass additional keys (also with possible dot-notation) as addition arguments. In that case, additional parts of state will be fetched and passed to a sub-reducer:

	const r = subReducer("persons", personReducer, "assets.cars");

    r({persons: ["John", "Jill"], assets: {cars: ["Honda"]}}, action);
    // => {
    //   persons: personReducer(["John", "Jill"], action, ["Honda"]), 
    //   assets: {cars: ["Honda"]}
    // }

This technique is mentioned in Redux docs, in "Beyond combineReducers" page.

composeReducers(reducer1, reducer2, ...)

Creates a wrapper reducer that calls passed reducers one after another, passing intermediate states. and returning the result of the last one.

Useful to "concatenate" a few subReducers. like:

	composeReducers(
	    subReducer("files.persons", personReducer, "assets.swag"),
	    subReducer("files.clients", clientReducer, "news"),
	    subReducer("assets", assetReducer),
	    baseReducer
	)

cowValueModel(key)

Creates an object with set of functions allowing to set or get specified key from any object. Get when one arg, set when two args. You can use dot notation.

Setting return a copy with specified (sub-)property changed; in case no change actually happens, returns the original object.

    const name = cowValueModel("name");
    
    name({name: "Tom"});
    // => "Tom"
    name({name: "Tom"}, "Jerry");
    // => {name: "Jerry"}
    
    const city = cowValueModel("address.city");
    const object = {address: {city: "New York"}};
    
    city(object);
    // => "New York"
    city(object, "London");
    // => {address: {city: "London"}}
    object;
    // => {address: {city: "New York"}}
    city(object, "New York") === object;
    // => true

In case you pass second argument to cowValueModel, it is used as a parsed list of keys instead of default firstArg.split('.').

If you put a number in a list of keys to use, an object will be treated as an array (unlike the default string case, where it is treated as an object), so copy wil be created using [...obj], not using {...obj}.

That way you can create eg. const c = cowValueObject("name of 34th person", ["person", 34, "name"]) to access obj.person[34].name with c(obj) / c(obj, val).