Skip to content

webNeat/redux-neat

Repository files navigation

redux-neat

An opinionated and simple way to use Redux.

Bundle size Tests Status Version MIT

Contents

Features

  • Zero boilerplate - Single create() function to set up your entire Redux store.
  • Full TypeScript support - Actions and selectors are fully typed with inference.
  • Mutable syntax - Write handlers that mutate state directly (powered by Immer).
  • Nested organization - Group related handlers and getters in nested objects.
  • React integration - Selectors are React hooks that subscribe to state changes.
  • Redux DevTools - Automatic integration with Redux DevTools browser extension.

Installation

npm i redux-neat
# or
yarn add redux-neat
# or
pnpm add redux-neat

Note: This library requires react and react-dom as peer dependencies.

Quick Start

import {create} from 'redux-neat'

// 1. Create store with handlers and getters
const {store, actions, selectors, getters} = create(
  {count: 0}, // initial state
  {
    handlers: {
      increment: (state) => {
        state.count++
      },
      add: (state, n: number) => {
        state.count += n
      },
    },
    getters: {
      count: (state) => state.count,
    },
  }
)

// 2. Use actions to update state
actions.increment()
actions.add(5)

// 3. Use selectors in React components (they are hooks!)
function Counter() {
  const count = selectors.count()
  return <div>{count}</div>
}

// 4. Use getters outside of React
const currentCount = getters.count()

That's it! No action types, no action creators, no reducers. Just handlers and getters.

Exploring the API

The library exports a single function create and some TypeScript types:

import {create} from 'redux-neat'
import type {StoreConfig, Handlers, Getters} from 'redux-neat'

Defining handlers

Handlers are functions that update the state. They receive the current state as the first argument and can receive additional arguments:

const {actions} = create<State>(initialState, {
  handlers: {
    // Handler with no extra arguments
    reset: (state) => {
      state.count = 0
    },
    // Handler with one argument
    add: (state, n: number) => {
      state.count += n
    },
    // Handler with multiple arguments
    addMultiple: (state, a: number, b: number) => {
      state.count += a + b
    },
  },
  getters: {},
})

// Call actions (state argument is not passed, it's handled internally)
actions.reset()
actions.add(5)
actions.addMultiple(2, 3)

Handlers can mutate the state directly.

Defining getters

Getters are functions that derive data from the state. They are returned as React hooks (selectors) to use inside components, and as regular functions (getters) to use outside of React:

const {selectors, getters} = create<State>(initialState, {
  handlers: {},
  getters: {
    // Simple getter
    count: (state) => state.count,
    // Getter with arguments
    countPlusN: (state, n: number) => state.count + n,
    // Computed values
    isPositive: (state) => state.count > 0,
  },
})

// In a React component
function MyComponent() {
  const count = selectors.count()
  const countPlus10 = selectors.countPlusN(10)
  const isPositive = selectors.isPositive()
  // ...
}

// Outside of React
const currentCount = getters.count()
const currentCountPlus10 = getters.countPlusN(10)
const currentlyPositive = getters.isPositive()

Using nested handlers and getters

You can organize handlers and getters in nested objects for better code organization:

type State = {
  user: {name: string; age: number}
  settings: {theme: 'light' | 'dark'}
}

const {actions, selectors, getters} = create<State>(initialState, {
  handlers: {
    user: {
      setName: (state, name: string) => {
        state.user.name = name
      },
      birthday: (state) => {
        state.user.age++
      },
    },
    settings: {
      toggleTheme: (state) => {
        state.settings.theme = state.settings.theme === 'light' ? 'dark' : 'light'
      },
    },
  },
  getters: {
    user: {
      name: (state) => state.user.name,
      age: (state) => state.user.age,
    },
    settings: {
      theme: (state) => state.settings.theme,
    },
  },
})

// Actions mirror the nested structure
actions.user.setName('Alice')
actions.user.birthday()
actions.settings.toggleTheme()

// Selectors mirror the nested structure (in React components)
const name = selectors.user.name()
const theme = selectors.settings.theme()

// Getters mirror the nested structure (outside of React)
const currentName = getters.user.name()
const currentTheme = getters.settings.theme()

In Redux DevTools, nested actions appear with dot notation: user.setName, user.birthday, settings.toggleTheme.

Using selectors in React components

Selectors are React hooks that use useSelector from react-redux under the hood. Your app needs to be wrapped with Provider:

import {Provider} from 'react-redux'
import {create} from 'redux-neat'

const {store, actions, selectors} = create<State>(initialState, config)

// Wrap your app with Provider
function App() {
  return (
    <Provider store={store}>
      <Counter />
    </Provider>
  )
}

// Use selectors in components
function Counter() {
  const count = selectors.count()
  return (
    <div>
      <p>Count: {count}</p>
      <button onClick={() => actions.increment()}>+</button>
      <button onClick={() => actions.decrement()}>-</button>
    </div>
  )
}

Disabling Redux DevTools

By default, redux-neat connects to Redux DevTools if available. You can disable this:

const {store, actions, selectors} = create<State>(initialState, {
  handlers,
  getters,
  withDevTools: false,
})

Changelog

See CHANGELOG.md for release history.

About

An opinionated and simple way to use Redux

Resources

License

Contributing

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

 
 
 

Contributors

Languages