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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

Summary

In this chapter, we covered Jotai, a new kid on the block of state management libraries. Inspired by a new, atomic approach to state management proposed by Facebook through their library named Recoil, Jotai has become more and more popular within the React community. It offers a bottom-up approach, as opposed to top-down libraries, such as Redux or MobX. It’s honestly stupidly easy to configure and use. It doesn’t offer many utilities, but the documentation is very clear and easy to use. In this chapter, we managed to use it to fetch and store data, and we also used it to implement actions on that data, such as adding items to an array. Jotai marks the end of our journey with classic state management libraries.

In the next chapter, we’ll talk about React Query, which is not a state management library, but a data-fetching library. It does have its place in this book, however. More on that in the next chapter! See you there!

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