Takes on State

React is actually a bit of an outlier with state management. While it has first-class tools like useState and Context, you’re more own your own for reactive global state. Here’s David Ceddia with “React State Management Libraries and How


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This content originally appeared on CSS-Tricks and was authored by Chris Coyier

React is actually a bit of an outlier with state management. While it has first-class tools like useState and Context, you’re more own your own for reactive global state. Here’s David Ceddia with “React State Management Libraries and How to Choose” which does a good job of talking about the options. I say “outlier” because every other major JavaScript framework has its own blessed global state implementations.

To me, the concept of state is vital to front-end development. It’s like components in that way. It’s just shaking out that it’s a smart way to work on digital products. State is our own abstraction of what is happening on a site. It can be whether a sidebar is open or closed, a list of comments data, the details of logged-in users, or anything else that we need to draw and make functional UI.

That’s why it still feels surprising to me that native web components didn’t attempt to tackle the idea of state at all. I’m not informed enough to know why that is, but as an observer, I can see that developers are clamoring to find the best ways to make state work in and across web components. Most recently, I came across @vue/lit by Evan You. That is a microframework for web components that solves templating and re-rendering by using lit-html, and then incorporating reactive state with Vue’s reactivity. Looks pretty cool to me.

Evan’s idea takes the the combined weight of libraries in use to ~6kb. So how low can we go here? Krasimir Tsonev wrote “Using JavaScript module system for state management” where they use no libraries at all (arguably creating a small one of their own along the way). A state manager can just be a module we import and use that is essentially an Object with values, mutation functions, and listeners. That takes the overhead of state mangement down to just about nothing, at the cost of giving up the efficient re-rendering, better templating, and lifecycle stuff you’d get by using more robust libraries.

Speaking of not using any libraries at all, here’s Leo Bauza with “How does Viget JavaScript?” where they go into the vanilla pattern they use to add functionality on top of an HTML foundation. It looks like all functionality is applied via data-* attributes, and each data attribute has its own JavaScript module (Class) that handles that specific bit of functionality. It doesn’t look like the deal with global state here, but they do handle state rather manually within the modules.

I find all this stuff fascinating. In my own work, I bet I’m rather typical. If it’s a small baby thing, I might be up for a roll-my-own pattern. If it’s a medium-sized thing but sorta low-impact, I’d probably reach for the new-and-fancy — and maybe even experimental — takes. But the second I’m doing something big and high-impact, I find way more comfort in picking from the biggest players, even if that sometimes means heavier libraries. 😬


The post Takes on State appeared first on CSS-Tricks.

You can support CSS-Tricks by being an MVP Supporter.


This content originally appeared on CSS-Tricks and was authored by Chris Coyier


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