rematch
hookstate
rematch | hookstate | |
---|---|---|
10 | 16 | |
8,459 | 1,633 | |
0.1% | - | |
2.5 | 4.8 | |
7 months ago | 5 months ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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rematch
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What is React State Management?
Link: https://rematchjs.org/
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Learning Redux as a beginner and where to start
I use Rematch. It’s built on top of redux but without all the ridiculous boiler plate. I looked into Redux Toolkit but found it still requiring too much unneeded code.
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You don’t need a state management library for React. Use useState + Context
Rematch
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Which state management to use?
Rematch is a nice wrapper on redux. I’d also recommend recoil, not sure if they’re stable yet but I’ve used it in production without any issues. Depends on the complexity of your app, may be overkill using these libraries.
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Lets vote on React State Management
Rematch - this is what I used last time after careful evaluation.
- Redux Toolkit is Awesome
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What's your favorite state manager?
I’ve always found Redux too verbose and cumbersome. Luckily I found Rematch. It is Redux best practices without the boilerplate
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HOCs are slowing down my app
I'm working on a Grid component which uses react window to render the cells, Each cell uses 5 HOCs where they each subscribe to the store(I use rematch) with connect and some of the HOCs have selectors where they compute some data with a relatively expensive function. I use lodash compose to merge all the HOCs and use it in the Cell component.
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Rematch.js v2 released
Rematch has been created a few years ago by Shawn McKay and Blair Bodnar, a pair of canadian programmers. It's a tiny but super powerful wrapper around Redux that reduces tons of boilerplate that Redux needs to operate.
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Options for offline + online database
Checkout Rematch as a redux implementation. It is build on top of redux, but removes all the horrible boilerplate and keeps the good parts.
hookstate
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A Comprehensive Guide to React State Management
Hookstate
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ReactJS Good Practices
Avoid using complex state structures to make it easier to manage and debug. There are multiple libraries to help manage complex state management such as Redux, Hookstate, etc.
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What is React State Management?
Link: https://hookstate.js.org/
- 2022: Best State management libraries in React JS
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The new wave of React state management
As you stumble on this post and article, do check out one library not mentioned in this list: hookstate. I'm a big fan, the API is very simple and it offers lots of extendability options.
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As a beginner which is better Redux or useContext() API?
Why don't you try out hook state
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Redattolo, un gioco per ████████ in React (Next.js)
Lo stack tecnologico è abbastanza standard per il 2022: il core è Next.js (quindi React, 18), di store managemente se ne occupa Hookstate e per un po' di collante in più c'è l'event emitter / pubsub Mitt.
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React state management libraries in 2022
I have been using Hookstate, curiously aanbidt never mentioned in lists like this.
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What's best practice for managing state without Redux?
I've never understood why Hookstate (https://hookstate.js.org/) doesn't get more love. It's super-simple (no boilerplate), modern (hook-based), performant (works great for all size apps) and even works outside of components beautifully. It's somewhat similar to context, but more robust and feature-rich (because it's a true state management solution, which context really isn't meant to be). It's basically the only way I've done state in React for a couple of years now and I wouldn't trade it for the world.
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Noob question, Nextjs vs CRA?
If your data requirements aren't particularly mutating / don't mutate regularly then the newer context api would be your friend it essentially variable that is scoped to your react tree which components can subscribe to changes of, but it is important to know that: unfortunately the current useContext hook (and by extension the rest of the context api) doesn't have any means of specifically "choosing" / "selecting" a part of that context state which is where it falls behind redux etc... - even though they technically operate very very similarly - both redux and context api make use of "subscriptions" to track state updates, just that the context api was designed as a means of "dependency injection" whereas redux was designed for managing state across an entire application. Passing data through props is practically the same, as before the hooks api - avoid prop drilling etc... if you're simply looking at avoiding prop-drilling and just passing some stateful value to another component thats deeply nested then context is your friend - as for redux, I personally am further inclined to hookstate as I think their api is really strong.
What are some alternatives?
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.
zustand - 🐻 Bear necessities for state management in React
next-redux-wrapper - Redux wrapper for Next.js
jotai - 👻 Primitive and flexible state management for React
redux-toolkit - The official, opinionated, batteries-included toolset for efficient Redux development
react-redux - Official React bindings for Redux [Moved to: https://github.com/reduxjs/react-redux]
react-hook-form - 📋 React Hooks for form state management and validation (Web + React Native)
pinia-undo - 🍍 Undo/Redo plugin for pinia.
unstated-next - 200 bytes to never think about React state management libraries ever again
react-native-segmented-control - 🎉 React Native Segmented Control 🎮 for both iOS, Android and Web
particule - Fine-grained atomic React state management library