redux-action-reducer

  • Filter robots by matching their names against a search string

  • Need to separate:

    • The entire list of robots

    • The currently-displayed list of robots

  • Latter changes each time a search is run

    • Which means that search updates state

  • We need:

    • An action object

    • With an action type

    • And a reducer to handle it

Giving the Action a Name

  • Define a constant to identify this action

    • Could use a raw string in this case

    • But we know we're going to want symbolic constants in namespaces eventually

  • Put it in the file constants.js

export const SET_SEARCH_TERM = "SET_SEARCH_TERM";

Create an Action Object

  • Define a function in actions.js to create an object representing an action

  • Again, more elaborate than we need for this small example

  • But we will eventually want to insulate ourselves from details

  • Put this in actions.js

    • Larger applications will have one file of actions per module

import CHANGE_SEARCHTERM from 'constants'

export const setSearchTerm = (text) =>  { type: CHANGE_SEARCHTERM, payload: text }

Handle the Action

  • Create the complement to our action generator in reducers.js

  • A constant defining the initial state...

  • ...that is the default value of reducer function's state argument...

  • ...and an action that tells the function how to update state

import { CHANGE_SEARCHTERM } from 'actions'

const initialState = {
  searchTerm: ''
}

const robotsSearch = (state=initialState, action={}) => {
  switch (action.type) {
    case CHANGE_SEARCHTERM:
      return Object.assign({}, state, {searchTerm: action.payload})
    default:
      return state
  }
}

export default robotsSearch;
  • If our reducer doesn't recognize the action, it does nothing

    • Which makes it safe for us to chain reducers together

    • Note that action has a default value of {}

      • So action.type will be undefined if we forget to pass an action

  • Use Object.assign to merge current state with action's payload

    • Does the right thing the first time because initialState is the default value of state

  • Reducer functions always return a new state object

    • May recycle parts of the old state (we'll see that later)

    • But never mutate state in place

Last updated