The state-observable-class
is an NPM package designed to facilitate the creation of reactive React components.
It does so by providing useStateObservableClass
hook which observes changes in the state of custom classes and automatically refreshing the React components when any state changes occur.
- React 18 or higher
To install the package, use the following command in your project:
npm install state-observable-class
For a practical demonstration of how to use this package, please refer to the CodeSandbox project provided here: State Observable Class Example
To be observed by the useStateObservableClass
hook, a class must adhere to the following rules:
- It must extend
StateObservableClassBase
, which is included in this package. - It must pass its initial state to super() in its constructor.
- An interface or type describing the state should be defined.
- It should update its state by calling this.updateState({ changedProperty: 'newValue' }), a method inherited from the base class.
Here is an example of how such a class might be structured:
import { StateObservableClassBase } from "state-observable-class";
import sleep from "await-sleep";
// Declare class state interface so everything is strongly typed
export interface LoginListenerState {
isStarting: boolean;
isStarted: boolean;
isFailed: boolean;
}
// Extend StateObservableClassBase<LoginListenerState>
class LoginListener extends StateObservableClassBase<LoginListenerState> {
constructor() {
const initialState: LoginListenerState = {
isStarting: false,
isStarted: false,
isFailed: false,
};
// Pass initial state to the StateObservableClassBase constructor
super(initialState);
}
async start() {
// Class state updates are done by calling updateState() with properties that has changed
this.updateState({ isStarting: true });
try {
await sleep(2500);
this.updateState({ isStarted: true });
} catch (error) {
this.updateState({ isFailed: true });
} finally {
this.updateState({ isStarting: false });
}
}
}
export default new LoginListener();
This class is ready to be used in a component. React will refresh all components observing its state. You can also directly call all its methods.
import React from "react";
import { useStateObservableClass } from "state-observable-class";
import loginListener from "./loginListener";
export default function Component1() {
const loginListenerState = useStateObservableClass(loginListener);
const canStart =
!loginListenerState.isStarting &&
!loginListenerState.isStarted &&
!loginListenerState.isFailed;
return (
<>
<h1>Component 1</h1>
{canStart && (
// We are free to call loginListener methods
<button onClick={() => loginListener.start()}>Start!</button>
)}
{loginListenerState.isStarting && <span>Starting...</span>}
{loginListenerState.isStarted && <span>Listening started...</span>}
{loginListenerState.isFailed && <span>Error!</span>}
</>
);
}