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You're reading from  React Components

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Published inApr 2016
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ISBN-139781785889288
Edition1st Edition
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Christopher Pitt
Christopher Pitt
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Christopher Pitt

Christopher Pitt is a principal developer for SilverStripe in Wellington, New Zealand. He usually works on open source software, though sometimes you'll find him building compilers and robots.
Read more about Christopher Pitt

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Redux


Flux leads us to separate our Backend class into a dispatcher and a store as a means of decoupling from a single state store and implementation. This leads to quite a bit of boilerplate, and we still have some coupling (to global dispatcher and store objects). It's great to have some terminology to work with, but it doesn't feel like the best solution.

What if we could decouple actions and storage and remove the global objects? This is what Redux seeks to do along with reducing boilerplate code and bringing about better standards overall.

Note

You can download the Redux tools by running npm install --save redux react-redux in addition to the previous dependences. Redux is also just a pattern, but the tools in these libraries will help greatly in setting things up.

Redux can be a lot to take in at first, but there are some simple underlying things which bind it all together. For a start, there's the idea that all state is held in immutable objects. This state should only be transformed...

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React Components
Published in: Apr 2016Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781785889288

Author (1)

author image
Christopher Pitt

Christopher Pitt is a principal developer for SilverStripe in Wellington, New Zealand. He usually works on open source software, though sometimes you'll find him building compilers and robots.
Read more about Christopher Pitt