redaxios
redux-toolkit
redaxios | redux-toolkit | |
---|---|---|
12 | 287 | |
4,526 | 10,405 | |
- | 0.6% | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
9 months ago | 2 days ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
redaxios
-
Counter-intuitive web devs mistakes
Once you start to handle all the corner-cases of the fetch, you will find that you don't want to repeat the boilerplate each time you call network, so you will write some wrapper around the fetch or use redaxios library from Jason Miller, which provides axios-like API on top of fetch so it weights only 800 bytes, which is nice. But then you might need the axios interceptors which redaxios do not implement and if your application upload files and you want to track the upload progress with ProgressEvent, the fetch does not support that, only XMLHttpRequest does, on which the original axios is based. And after you write all your custom wrappers around fetch and upload wrappers around XMLHttpRequest, you might reconcider the original statement, that axios library is obsoleted.
-
Safe Data Fetching in Modern JavaScript
If you love Axios, but don’t love that it’ll add 11kb to your bundle, Redaxios is a great alternative, that uses the same API as Axios, but in less than 1kb.
-
You might be using `fetch` wrong...
Axios is another great, and very popular, solution for clean data fetching. It is a bit larger (10kb gzip vs 2kb gzip), so if kb size is important to you (I would argue it typically should be) redaxios is a great option too
-
If you know, you know
Then you get redaxios.
- Axios vs Fetch?
-
Modern API data-fetching methods in React
There's a neat library called https://github.com/developit/redaxios that implements almost all the Axios API, but as a wrapper around fetch instead.
-
can't set httponly cookie in nestjs
As for your very last comment, for those who can’t part from axios’ API, try redaxios which is just a super thin wrapper around fetch().
-
How do you go about architecturing large React application?
If you want use fetch but with Axios API, small size(~1KB), I suggest you checkout redaxios from Preact creator.
- [AskJS] dame - 23 KB axios alternative with zero dependencies. What do you think?
- What are some React life pro tips?
redux-toolkit
-
Copilot: Weapon For Laid Back Developers
In my example I am using Redux Toolkit and I got a prompt for actions to login and logout the user. If I need more functions, I can simply start typing the name, and Copilot provides the completion. For instance, in the example, I'm adding a function to update the user. And of course at the end of the file it suggests the exports.
-
Streamlining State Management with Redux Toolkit
Check out the official documentation.
-
Next.js Weekly #34: StyleX, Self-Healing URLs, AuthKit, Scaleable TailwindCSS, Layouts vs Templates, Faster Next.js Websites [👇 all links in the comments]
Redux Toolkit 2.0
-
This Month in React Nov 2023 – Redux Toolkit 2.0, Kent v Lee, Prettier bounty
Redux Toolkit 2.0 is almost here! Hopefully shipping by this weekend :) Migration page
- Redux Toolkit 2.0: new features, faster perf, smaller bundle sizes (plus major versions for all Redux family packages!)
-
Redux Toolkit 2.0: new features, faster perf, smaller bundle sizes, and more
I am _thrilled_ to announce that:
Redux Toolkit 2.0 is LIVE!!!
- https://github.com/reduxjs/redux-toolkit/releases/tag/v2.0.0
This major version has new features, faster perf, smaller bundle size, and removes deprecated options.
It's accompanied by majors for all our Redux family packages
## RTK 2.0:
- a new `combineSlices` method for lazy-loading reducers - Updates to `createSlice` to include a `selectors` field and allow defining thunks inside
- Immer 10 w/ faster updates
- Removal of deprecated options
See the migration guide:
- https://redux.js.org/usage/migrations/migrating-rtk-2
All of the Redux libraries now have modernized packaging with full ESM/CJS compat. They also ship modern JS (no transpiling for IE11), which means smaller bundle sizes.
We've also done byte-shaving work to shrink the bundles (extracting error messages, de-duping imports)
## Redux core 5.0:
- The TS conversion we did in 2019!
- Action types _must_ be strings
- `UnknownAction` as the default action type
- Better preloaded state types
- Internal subscription improvements
- Still marks `createStore` as deprecated!
- https://github.com/reduxjs/redux/releases/tag/v5.0.0
## React-Redux 9.0:
- *Now requires React 18 and RTK 2.0 / Redux 5.0*
-
Blogged Answers: My Experience Modernizing Packages to ESM
Oh hey, that's my post!
(yes I spend too much time refreshing HN :) )
FWIW I did end up with a packaging combination that seems to work sufficiently. I never did fix the "FalseCJS" issue that `are-the-types-wrong` is detecting. I played with double-emitting TS typedefs, and the `tsup` tool _does_ actually have support for that now (added by Andrew Branch from the TS team). So it might be more feasible now. But ultimately I decided I was tired of messing with packaging setup and that what I've got is good enough. (hopefully)
We're actually about to launch Redux Toolkit 2.0 and Redux 5.0 this week, assuming the last couple pieces come together. Here's the latest RCs - you can see the current `package.json` files in there:
- https://github.com/reduxjs/redux-toolkit/releases/tag/v2.0.0...
- https://github.com/reduxjs/redux/releases/tag/v5.0.0-rc.1
-
Setting up Redux Persist with Redux Toolkit in React JS
However, Redux, or pure Redux to be specific, can be quite verbose and boilerplate-heavy. It requires a significantly lengthy setup, which is where Redux Toolkit comes in handy, offering a simplified and more efficient way to set up and manage state in your React applications.
-
44 React Frontend Interview Questions
State manager is a tool or library that helps manage the state of an application. It provides a centralized store or container for storing and managing data that can be accessed and updated by different components in the application. A state manager solves several problems. Firstly, it is a good practice to separate data and the logic related to it from components. Secondly, when using local state and passing it between components, the code can become convoluted due to the potential for deep nesting of components. By having a global store, we can access and modify data from any component. Alongside React Context, Redux or MobX are commonly used as state management libraries. Learn more Learn more
What are some alternatives?
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]
redux-saga - An alternative side effect model for Redux apps
axios - Promise based HTTP client for the browser and node.js
zustand - 🐻 Bear necessities for state management in React
react-helmet - A document head manager for React
redux-thunk - Thunk middleware for Redux
documentation - 🍰 Architectural design methodology for Frontend projects
next-redux-wrapper - Redux wrapper for Next.js
twilio-video-app-react - A collaboration application built with the twilio-video.js SDK and React.js
vite - Next generation frontend tooling. It's fast!
fetch - A Fetch API wrapper