react-final-form
rtk-query
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react-final-form | rtk-query | |
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28 | 47 | |
7,339 | 579 | |
0.0% | - | |
1.3 | 8.7 | |
11 months ago | almost 3 years ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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react-final-form
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Best react form validation libraries to use in 2023
react-final-form
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7 great libraries for React
4: Final Form
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A side project I made a year ago and still use to quickly skim through repos/libraries
If you like form libraries, quick plug for Final Form, which was made by the same folks who did Redux Form. It's render engine agnostic (works on react, angular, vue) but has a way better api than formik, and handles custom input components better than RHF.
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Best Library To Create Simple And Complex Forms In React
It's the most popular React library for creating forms compared to formik, react final form, and others, and I use it for all my client projects.
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Formik sucks, is there a decent lib or the best way is to build your own forms?
Another library that does this is react final form, but RHF has better typescript support, works using hooks, and has some excellent documentation.
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What are your struggles when working with forms in react ?
Have you checked out https://final-form.org/react/? Seems like the succesor of redux form. I've never heard of it.
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Lightweight Forms Validation in React
For a forms-heavy application I wouldn't hesitate to pick some popular library, like React Hook Form, React Final Form, or Formik. But for a simple website with a single “Contact Us” form? I'd try to keep things light.
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Experienced Devs, what's something that frustrates you about working with React that's not a simple "you'll know how to do it better once you've enough experience"?
React final form is very complete
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The Best React Form Library (2022)
I’ve tried lots of form libraries, but none solve the burden of easy, rapid form building as well as RJSF does.
- Comparison of UI libraries for React
rtk-query
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What I Learned as a Web Dev on My First React Native Project
The Redux library is quite a common choice thanks to its broad ecosystem. Luckily, there is now a very useful Redux Toolkit that mitigates the amount of boilerplate you have to usually write. RTK Query is a very new Redux solution for data fetching and caching, hopefully making our lives even easier. Though the web seems to slowly be moving away from Redux to React Query, SWR or other solutions, mobile is a different story; Redux is holding on to its popularity, as it integrates well with libraries that persist and rehydrate the global state for users when they relaunch the app.
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Is there an effective solution for implementing data-fetching logic while keeping the codebase DRY?
rtk query is built-in to the redux toolkit starting from v 1.6
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Using Redux vs Regular States?
For api data. Check out rtk query https://rtk-query-docs.netlify.app/ It is supposed to better for api data with redux. I have not yet tried it.
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Kea: Production Ready React State Management
I haven't looked at Kea in a while, but I'll toss out some comparisons based on my knowledge of RTK and what I remember about Kea + looking at its docs.
Kea's main selling point is that it lets you define self-contained chunks of Redux logic. Initially, this is similar to RTK's `createSlice`, in that you're writing a set of "case reducers" + action creators. However, it also build in Redux-Saga as a general-purpose side effects approach, and lets you write "listeners" that respond to dispatched actions.
Where it particularly differs from RTK is in the amount of abstraction included. RTK tries to stay "visibly Redux" [0], and the abstractions are fairly thin - the focus is on simplifying the typical Redux code patterns, without hiding the fact that you're using Redux. Kea is much more heavily abstracted. It does use a number of Redux terms ("actions", "reducers", etc), but the code that you write looks noticeably different than a "typical" Redux app. Also, RTK focuses on thunks as the default async approach, rather than sagas [1]
I believe Kea also has some mechanisms for combining together those "logic" chunks in various ways, including doing so dynamically at runtime, and it appears to have some "lifecycle"-type callbacks for handling when those chunks get mounted and unmounted.
RTK Query [2] [3], on the other hand, is a purpose-built data-fetching abstraction, most similar to React Query and Apollo. Its only purpose is to fetch data from whatever URL endpoints you've defined, handle the loading state, update the cache with the results, and re-render whatever components care about that data.
I haven't actually used Kea myself, but it does appear to have some meaningful thought and development put into it. I would still recommend RTK as the default approach for anyone wanting to use Redux (and of course I'm biased there), but Kea has some interesting approaches.
[0] https://blog.isquaredsoftware.com/2019/10/redux-starter-kit-...
[1] https://blog.isquaredsoftware.com/2020/02/blogged-answers-wh...
[2] https://rtk-query-docs.netlify.app
[3] https://github.com/reduxjs/redux-toolkit/releases/tag/v1.6.0...
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Redux Toolkit v1.6 alpha.1: RTK Query APIs integrated and smaller bundles with Redux 4.1!
https://github.com/rtk-incubator/rtk-query/issues/215#issuecomment-826344927
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Apollo or redux for state?
tl;dr Apollo, URQL, SWR, react-query, nor even RTK Query are meant to be wholesale replacements for Redux which is meant for global state.
- RTK Query 0.3 Final Beta: custom query functions, lazy queries, and more!
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Use case for redux-thunk?
You may want to look into our upcoming "RTK Query" API, which is specifically designed to abstract the process of fetching and caching data for Redux. We've got one more alpha release coming up that we're finalizing now, and then we'll be merging the APIs back into Redux Toolkit itself and releasing it.
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Cousins playing nicely: Experimenting with NgRx Store and RTK Query
Redux provides state management that has been widely used across many different web ecosystems for a long time. NgRx provides a more opinionated, batteries-included framework for managing state and side effects in the Angular ecosystem based on the Redux pattern. Redux Toolkit provides users of Redux the same batteries-included approach with conveniences for setting up state management and side effects. The Redux Toolkit (RTK) team has recently released RTK Query, described as "an advanced data fetching and caching tool, designed to simplify common cases for loading data in a web application", built on top of Redux Toolkit and Redux internally. When I first read the documentation for RTK Query, it immediately piqued my interest in a few ways:
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Need help in choosing state management library.
Check out RTK Query since you are already using Redux.
What are some alternatives?
react-hook-form - 📋 React Hooks for form state management and validation (Web + React Native)
redux-saga - An alternative side effect model for Redux apps
formik - Build forms in React, without the tears 😭 [Moved to: https://github.com/jaredpalmer/formik]
react-query - 🤖 Powerful asynchronous state management, server-state utilities and data fetching for TS/JS, React, Solid, Svelte and Vue. [Moved to: https://github.com/TanStack/query]
react-jsonschema-form - A React component for building Web forms from JSON Schema.
zustand - 🐻 Bear necessities for state management in React
JSONForms - Customizable JSON Schema-based forms with React, Angular and Vue support out of the box.
msw - Seamless REST/GraphQL API mocking library for browser and Node.js.
react-redux-form - Create forms easily in React with Redux.
Recoil - Recoil is an experimental state management library for React apps. It provides several capabilities that are difficult to achieve with React alone, while being compatible with the newest features of React.
SurveyJS - Free Open-Source JavaScript form builder library with integration for React, Angular, Vue, jQuery, and Knockout that lets you load and run multiple web forms, or build your own self-hosted form management system, retaining all sensitive data on your servers. You have total freedom of choice as to the backend, because any server + database combination is fully compatible.
redux-persist - persist and rehydrate a redux store