redux-devtools
lodash
Our great sponsors
redux-devtools | lodash | |
---|---|---|
19 | 187 | |
13,871 | 58,868 | |
0.5% | 0.5% | |
9.0 | 5.1 | |
2 days ago | 7 days ago | |
TypeScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
redux-devtools
- React Jam just started, making a game in 13 days with React
-
20 Essential Parts Of Any Large Scale React App
Also, you should use redux-devtools extension to get the most out of any react-redux-based project.
-
Development instrumentation recommendations?
Use NgRx's action stream as a logging solution. Dispatch actions instead of logging. You don't have to worry about the state management part or anything either. Add the store-devtools package along with the base store package. It'll let you configure only logging while in development mode and a few other options. Then, install the Redux Devtools extension into your browser. That will give you a view of the dispatched actions and any data you want to pass along with them. It has a filter, so you can tag your actions like you normally would as described in the docs. Like, "[Log Level] [Feature] log message". Then, filter them in the dev tools to see just what you want. You can see a screenshot of it here. You may even like some of its other features and maybe you'll pick up more of the pattern as you see fit.
-
7 best ReactJS developer tools to simplify your workflow
Redux DevTools is a browser extension that allows developers to inspect and debug Redux stores. This tool helps developers to track state changes, actions, and other data related to the Redux store. You can download it from its official GitHub repository: https://github.com/reduxjs/redux-devtools.
-
Improve Your Debugging Approach for Better Software Applications (& Sounder Sleep 😴)
Redux dev tools
-
useEffect and state updates
You can still keep your custom hooks in separate files, maybe in a folder called state. You could migrate to a state library when things start to seem unmanageable, or when you want one of the many cool features that a state library can offer, like automatically persisting parts of state to your user's storage using middleware (Redux docs, Zustand docs), easily managing API connections and query caching with RTK Query, or having a log of every state change with the ability to revert/go back in time to debug state changes with Redux Devtools (also works with Zustand).
-
Introducing The FAR3 Stack: A Versatile Toolkit For Web Development.
With the redux-devtools-extension, we can now easily see all the actions that have been dispatched, as well as the current state of our store. This extension also allows us to time travel, meaning we can go back and forth through different states to see how our application got to where it is, as shown in the image below.
-
I'm having issues with my reducers and I don't know why
We need to see your RECEIVE_BENCHES action creator as well as dispatch call to tell you more. You should inspect what is going on in your reducer, either by setting a breakpoint in your editor's debug mode, by using Redux DevTools (https://github.com/reduxjs/redux-devtools), or simply by writing dirty console.log and debugger calls.
-
Redux Best Practices
When an action is dispatched, all of the reducers will be notified and every single one of them will check if they can handle the action. Not only that, but the Redux dev tools will be a mess trying to see what action was fired when. That’s why we should try to think of actions as events that happened and not what the action is changing. For example, we should rather have an action called userLoggedIn than setUserId.
- Redux explicado de manera simple y sucinta para los desarrolladores de React
lodash
-
8 NPM Packages for JavaScript Beginners [2024][+tutorials]
Lodash.js is like the Swiss Army knife for JavaScript developers. Need to manipulate data structures or dabble in functional programming? Lodash is here to save the day with its arsenal of utilities. It's all about making your code cleaner and your life easier, which is probably why big guns like Google and Airbnb have it in their toolkit.
-
Full Stack Web Development Concept map
lodash - utility library enabling things like deep object comparison that aren't easy to do with javascript out of the box. docs
-
Getting Started with Lodash: A Beginner's Guide to JavaScript Utility Functions
Lodash is a widely used JavaScript utility library that provides a plethora of functions to simplify common programming tasks. From manipulating arrays and objects to handling edge cases and implementing functional programming paradigms, Lodash offers a comprehensive toolkit for JavaScript developers. In this beginner's guide, we'll learn how to get started with Lodash and leverage its functionality to write cleaner, more efficient, and more maintainable code.
-
JavaScript Libraries That You Should Know
5. Lodash
-
JavaScript Equality Under the Lens: Enhancing React's Dependency Checks
If you want even more sophisticated equality checks like deep comparisons, there's the: lodash.iseQual library that'll do this for you out of the box. At least now you do have a bit of clarity on what's happening under the hood, so there's no harm in using a library.
-
Top 20 Frontend Interview Questions With Answers
It's also important to ensure that you're importing libraries correctly, so webpack can perform tree shaking effectively. For example, let's import lodash, as follows:
-
How to Remove Duplicate Objects from an Array in JavaScript
Lodash is awesome! It’s a JavaScript library that helps you do many things with data. You can use Lodash to manipulate arrays, objects, JavaScript strings, numbers, and more. It’s easy to get Lodash in your project. You can use npm or a CDN to install and import it. Here’s how:
-
Observables and Observers in RxJS
Think of RxJS as Lodash for events.
-
Coming to grips with JS: a Rubyist's deep dive
lodash and You Might Not Need Lodash
-
Deep Cloning Objects in JavaScript, the Modern Way
A lot of Lodash functions are implemented as combinations of other Lodash functions, so importing a single function actually imports half of Lodash under the hood:
https://github.com/lodash/lodash/blob/main/src/.internal/bas...
What are some alternatives?
remote-redux-devtools - Redux DevTools remotely.
ramda - :ram: Practical functional Javascript
Reactime 6.0: State Debugger for React - Developer tool for time travel debugging and performance monitoring in React applications.
underscore - JavaScript's utility _ belt
redux-devtools-chart-monitor
lazy.js - Like Underscore, but lazier
redux-devtools-dock-monitor - A resizable and movable dock for Redux DevTools monitors
RxJS
Refract - Harness the power of reactive programming to supercharge your components
Sugar - A Javascript library for working with native objects.
redux-beacon - Analytics integration for Redux and ngrx/store
immutable-js - Immutable persistent data collections for Javascript which increase efficiency and simplicity.