An application architecture for React utilizing a unidirectional data flow.
Start by looking through the guides and examples on Github. For more resources and API docs check out facebook.github.io/flux.
For more information on how Flux works check out the Flux Concepts guide, or the In Depth Overview.
Flux is more of a pattern than a framework, and does not have any hard dependencies. However, we often use EventEmitter as a basis for Stores
and React for our Views
. The one piece of Flux not readily available elsewhere is the Dispatcher
. This module, along with some other utilities, is available here to complete your Flux toolbox.
Flux is available as a npm module, so you can add it to your package.json file or run npm install flux
. The dispatcher will be available as Flux.Dispatcher
and can be required like this:
const Dispatcher = require('flux').Dispatcher;
Take a look at the dispatcher API and some examples.
We have also provided some basic utility classes to help get you started with Flux. These base classes are a solid foundation for a simple Flux application, but they are not a feature-complete framework that will handle all use cases. There are many other great Flux frameworks out there if these utilities do not fulfill your needs.
import {ReduceStore} from 'flux/utils';
class CounterStore extends ReduceStore<number> {
getInitialState(): number {
return 0;
}
reduce(state: number, action: Object): number {
switch (action.type) {
case 'increment':
return state + 1;
case 'square':
return state * state;
default:
return state;
}
}
}
Check out the examples and documentation for more information.
Clone the repo and navigate into the resulting flux
directory. Then run npm install
.
This will run Gulp-based build tasks automatically and produce the file Flux.js, which you can then require as a module.
You could then require the Dispatcher like so:
const Dispatcher = require('path/to/this/directory/Flux').Dispatcher;
The build process also produces de-sugared versions of the Dispatcher
and invariant
modules in a lib
directory, and you can require those modules directly, copying them into whatever directory is most convenient for you. The flux-todomvc and flux-chat example applications both do this.
See the CONTRIBUTING file for how to help out.
Flux is BSD-licensed. We also provide an additional patent grant.