dumb-react

1.0.2 • Public • Published

dumb-react

Smart and Dumb Components

Quick Start

const dumb = require('dumb-react')

const Hello = dumb(function Hello(props) {
    return (
        <div>Hello {props.name}</div>
    )
})

// optional step:
Hello.propTypes = { name: React.PropTypes.string.isRequried }

How do I handle state/context/lifecycle hooks?

This is intended for building the very simple components that don't need any of those things. You can append them manually if you like, but I'm not sure why you would.

Why would I use this?

When writing React components you often have sections of the UI that you display conditionally, or you generate from a list of data. There are a few options on how to accomplish these. Here's a sample where I chose to create variables in my render()

export default class Sample extends React.Component {
    render() {
        const { items, total } = this.props

        const itemElements = items.map((item) => {
            return (
                <li key={item.id}>
                    {item.name}
                </li>
            )
        })

        let moreButton
        if (items.length < total) {
            moreButton = (
                <button onClick={this.onLoadMore.bind(this)}>Load more</button>
            )
        }

        return (
            <div>
                Results:
                <ul>
                    {itemElements}
                </ul>
                {moreButton}
            </div>
        )
    }
}

Personally, I don't really like how render just keeps growing and is doing a bunch of different things. I have been splitting these into different render methods in the same component. I have a choice here. I could pass items and total to the functions that need them, or I could just call the functions with no parameters and let them handle pulling what they need off of this.props.

export default class Sample extends React.Component {
    renderItemElements(items) {
        return items.map((item) => {
            return (
                <li key={item.id}>
                    {item.name}
                </li>
            )
        })
    }
    renderMoreButton(items, total) {
        if (items.length < total) {
            return (
                <button onClick={this.onLoadMore.bind(this)}>Load more</button>
            )
        }
    }
    render() {
        const { items, total } = this.props
        return (
            <div>
                Results:
                <ul>
                    {this.renderItemElements(items)}
                </ul>
                {this.renderMoreButton(items, total)}
            </div>
        )
    }
}

Those render methods don't really do much. Why not make them their own components? This is what dumb-react is for

const ItemElements = dumb(function ItemElements(props) {
    return props.items.map((item) => {
        return (
            <li key={item.id}>
                {item.name}
            </li>
        )
    })
})

const MoreButton = dumb(function MoreButton(props) {
    if (props.items.length < props.total) {
        return (
            <button onClick={props.onLoadMore}>Load more</button>
        )
    }
})

export default class Sample extends React.Component {
    render() {
        const { items, total } = this.props
        return (
            <div>
                Results:
                <ul>
                    <ItemElements items={items} />
                </ul>
                <MoreButton
                    items={items}
                    total={total}
                    onLoadMore={this.onLoadMore.bind(this)} />
            </div>
        )
    }
}

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Install

npm i dumb-react

Weekly Downloads

2

Version

1.0.2

License

MIT

Last publish

Collaborators

  • asaayers