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Ramsay

Simple API for Redux Reducers.

If your Redux store looks like store.users[id] = userObject, then Ramsay is for you.

Installation

yarn add ramsay

Usage

import Ramsay from 'ramsay'

interface User {
	id: string
	name: string
}

const users = new Ramsay<User>('users') // for non-TS users: const users = new Ramsay('users')

/**
 * If you have a different field for your object id, or a different type (default is string):
 * new Ramsay<{ _id: number }, '_id'>('users', { idKey: '_id' })
 **/

// This is your reducer
const reducer = users.createReducer()
const { store, dispatch } = configureStore({ reducer })

// This is how you add/update a single object
dispatch(users.update({ id: 1, name: 'William' }))

console.log(store) // { 1: { id: 1, name: 'William' } }

// This is how you add/update multiple objects
dispatch(users.updateMany([{ id: 2, name: 'Walter' }, { id: 3, name: 'Jesse' }]))

console.log(store) // { 1: { id: 1, name: 'William' }, 2: { id: 2, name: 'Walter' }, 3: { id: 3, name: 'Jesse' } }

// This is how you remove a single object
dispatch(users.remove(1))

console.log(store) // { 2: { id: 2, name: 'Walter' }, 3: { id: 3, name: 'Jesse' } }

// This is how you remove multiple objects
dispatch(users.removeMany([2, 3]))

console.log(store) // {}

Custom Id Field and/or Type

You can customize which field Ramsay will use for indexing, in addition to the type of that field.

By default, Ramsay will scan for id on your object and assume it is a string.

To change this, adjust the following:

import Ramsay from 'ramsay'

interface User {
	_id: number
	name: string
}

const users = new Ramsay<User, '_id'>('users', { idKey: '_id' })
// for non-TS users: const users = new Ramsay('users', { idKey: '_id' })

If you're using TypeScript, Ramsay will automatically pick up the type of your id key field.

Extending Reducers

You can add your own custom actions ontop of Ramsay using extend parameter on the createReducer method:

const reducer = users.createReducer((state, action, prefix) => {
	switch(action.type) {
	case `${PREFIX}/CUSTOM_ACTION`:
		return users.withState(state).manuallyUpdateObject(action.userId, oldUser => ({ counter: oldUser.counter + 1 }))
	}
})

These additional actions will not take priority over Ramsay's built-in reducers for update, updateMany, remove, and removeMany.

Dispatch Functions

Ramsay can create custom dispatch functions which you can use to avoid importing your reducer. See below:

const users = new Ramsay('users')

const updateUser = users.createUpdateMethod()

updateUser({ id: 1, name: 'William' })

You can also pass in a default set of options into this create method. They will not take priority over any options declared inside the generated method.

const updateUsers = users.createUpdateManyMethod({ mapObject: user => ({ ...user, customChange: 1 }) })

updateUsers([{ id: 1, name: 'William' }])

// { 1: { id: 1, name: 'William', customChange: 1 } }

Plural and Singular Overrides

Ramsay attempts to figure out the singular and plural versions of your model name for internal use. For example:

users:
- singular: user
- plural: users

messages:
- singular: message
- plural: messages

eventEnrollments:
- singular: eventEnrollment
- plural: eventEnrollments

In some instances, Ramsay can't figure out a singular or plural version of your model name (for instance, cash).

You can provide your own custom singular/plural names in the options:

new Ramsay('cash', {
	plurals: {
		plural: 'cashes',
		singular: 'cash'
	}
})

Useful Information

  • By default, an action with the type RESET will reset the state to a default empty object ({}). You can disable this functionality by setting options.disableResetAction to true in your initial config (e.g. new Ramsay('users', { disableResetAction: true }))

License

MIT