Skip to content

wix-incubator/obsidian

Repository files navigation

SWUbanner




npm package coverage NPM downloads build status discord chat

Obsidian

React Obsidian is a dependency injection framework for React and React Native applications. It allows you to inject dependencies into hooks, components, and classes. Separating the construction and consumption of dependencies is crucial to maintaining a readable and testable codebase.

📖 Read more about Dependency Injection and Obsidian in Breaking complexity with Dependency Injection: Introducing Obsidian on Medium.

Example - Injecting a hook

Obsidian supports injecting hooks, components and classes. The example below shows how to inject a hook.

Step 1: Declare an object graph

Before we can inject dependencies into hooks, components and classes, we first need to declare our dependencies. Dependencies are declared in classes called "Graphs" where the relationships between the dependencies are outlined.

In the ApplicationGraph below, we declare two dependencies:

  1. httpClient
  2. biLogger

Both functions are annotated by the @Provides() annotation. This signals Obsidian that the results of these functions are provided by the graph and can be injected.

Notice how the biLogger function receives an httpClient as an argument. This means that biLogger is dependent on httpClient. Obsidian will create an httpClient when biLogger is injected.

@Singleton() @Graph()
class ApplicationGraph extends ObjectGraph {
  @Provides()
  httpClient(): HttpClient {
    return new HttpClient();
  }

  @Provides()
  biLogger(httpClient: HttpClient): BiLogger {
    return new BiLogger(httpClient);
  }
}

Step 2: Inject a dependency

type Injected = DependenciesOf<ApplicationGraph, 'biLogger'>; // { biLogger: BiLogger }

interface UseButtonPress {
  usePress: () => void;
}

// We must use destructuring for Obsidian to be able to inject the dependencies
const useButtonClick = ({ biLogger }: Injected): UseButtonPress => {
  const onClick = useCallback(() => {
    biLogger.logButtonClick();
  }, [biLogger]);
  
  return { onClick };
};

// Export the injected hook
export default injectHook(useButtonClick, ApplicationGraph);

Step 3: Use the injected hook

Now that we exported the injected hook, we can use it in a component without needing to provide its dependencies manually.

const Component = () => (
  // No need to specify dependencies as they are injected automatically
  const { onClick } = useButtonClick();
  <>
    <button onclick={onClick}>Click Me</button>
  </>
);