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Simplifying State Management in React Native

You're reading from   Simplifying State Management in React Native Master state management from hooks and context through to Redux, MobX, XState, Jotai and React Query

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803235035
Length 202 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Aleksandra Desmurs-Linczewska Aleksandra Desmurs-Linczewska
Author Profile Icon Aleksandra Desmurs-Linczewska
Aleksandra Desmurs-Linczewska
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 – Learn the Basics: Intro to React, States, Props, Hooks, and Context
2. Chapter 1: What are React and React Native? FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Managing State in a Simple React App 4. Part 2 – Creating a Real, Working App
5. Chapter 3: Planning and Setting Up the Funbook App 6. Chapter 4: Styling and Populating the Funbook App 7. Part 3 – Exploring Various Libraries for State Management in React Native
8. Chapter 5: Implementing Redux in Our Funbook App 9. Chapter 6: Using MobX as a State Manager in a React Native App 10. Chapter 7: Untangling Complex Flows in React Native Apps with XState 11. Chapter 8: Integrating Jotai in a React Native App 12. Chapter 9: Using React Query for Server-Side-Driven State Management 13. Part 4 – Summary
14. Chapter 10: Appendix 15. Index 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Understanding the history of ReactJS

In this section, we will briefly look into the history of ReactJS. If you’re not interested in this particular topic, feel free to skip this section and go straight to Thinking in React. Knowing the history of a framework is not compulsory for using it. If you prefer condensed knowledge served in a YouTube pill, I highly recommend watching a 10-minute video called The Story of React, published on YouTube by uidotdev.

The predecessors

Did you know that the first website ever created is still live? You can find it here: http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/TheProject.html. It was created in 1991! A lot has changed since then. For starters, web developers wanted to change their websites’ appearance, hence CSS was created. A few years later those same web developers wanted to see more interactivity on their now beautiful websites. This is when JavaScript found its place on the internet. But as we know, the web never stops evolving. Heavy usage of JavaScript led to the creation of libraries such as jQuery, BackboneJS, and Ember. Each library’s creators learned lessons from their competitors. They made decisions that led to creating very different developer experiences. The developers had their preferences and little wars over which library is better.

There is no right answer to this question. What is certain, however, is that user experience on websites evolved, no matter which library was used behind the scenes. Websites became much more interactive and adaptable to the user’s screen size. For example, it is common practice today to create separate menus for mobile views and desktop views. This can be achieved with JavaScript, or CSS alone. This user experience shift could not take place without the evolution of JavaScript open source libraries.

After a few years of adding more and more separate bits of JavaScript to websites, it was time for a more holistic solution. The first breakthrough came from Google, with AngularJS. AngularJS, officially released in 2010, was different from other solutions on the market at that time. This was not just another library; this was a framework. Developers were able to create complex interactions quickly, and they were no longer afraid that any change to their JavaScript files could break the entire page. I don’t want to go into the implementational details of AngularJS. After all, that is not the focus of this book. In broad strokes, AngularJS introduced special HTML attributes that were observed by the framework running in the background. As you may imagine, when JavaScript is observing dozens or even hundreds of elements and events, it will slow down. So, the user experience is suffering, and the world is ready for another JavaScript revolution. Google thought they would remain king of the hill with their Angular version 2, but in 2013, Facebook developers announced the release of ReactJS.

And then there was React

ReactJS was presented specifically as a user interface (UI) library. It was conceived to be used for end user interactions on websites. It also used JSX – an extension to JavaScript created for React. Many developers reacted, pun intended, angrily to this new syntax. I would say though, that angry reactions are not unexpected in the world of tech. Any new technological solution has to weather the storm of angry Reddit posts saying that it’s ugly, useless, or simply terrible. Luckily for us, ReactJS developers did not stop working on their open source framework because of this initial negative reaction. Furthermore, developers who got to know ReactJS became its advocates. Why, you may ask, did ReactJS stand the test of time, while Angular hasn’t? I believe it has to do with the high-level mindset of the framework. ReactJS proposes elegant, simple solutions while staying completely configurable to any needs. I will go further into this mindset idea in the next section.

Going back to our history lesson! We’re in 2013, and ReactJS has entered the scene with a bang. Many people hate it, but others use it for more and more complex websites. And it turns out, unfortunately, that ReactJS does not scale well. Your React components use state and props. If the parent creates a state, which needs to be read four to five components lower in the hierarchy, you encounter something that is dubbed prop drilling. Prop drilling means that the developer has to pass the necessary prop through many parent components in order to get to the final child that needs to read it. This process is irritating and boring, at the same time! This is when the first state management library was created – Redux. We will talk in detail about Redux and other state management libraries in the next chapters.

As of writing this book, ReactJS is one of the most popular JavaScript libraries. It evolves constantly, and its maintainers are open to public discussions and suggestions. In 2019, they introduced hooks and context. These two React utilities can cover a lot of your state management needs. They were created because the React team realized that developers using React needed an improvement in the state management area.

A few years before the introduction of hooks and context, specifically in 2015, Facebook developers released React Native. The true hero of this book! But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. At this moment, it is important that you understand the basic concepts of React. Let’s move on to the React mindset.

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Simplifying State Management in React Native
Published in: Jan 2023
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781803235035
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