React API
Reading state
use$
use$
computes a value and automatically listens to any observables accessed while running, and only re-renders if the computed value changes. This can take either an observable or a function that consumes observables.
Props:
selector
: Observable or computation function that listens to observables accessed while runningoptions
:{ suspense: boolean }
: Enable suspense when the value is a Promise and youâre using it within React.Suspense.
import { observable } from "@legendapp/state"import { use$ } from "@legendapp/state/react"
const state$ = observable({ selected: 1, theme })
const Component = ({ id }) => { // Only re-renders if the return value changes const isSelected = use$(() => id === state$.selected.get())
// Get the raw value of an observable and re-render when it changes const theme = use$(state$.theme)
...}
Using with React Suspense
Using { suspense: true }
as the second parameter makes the component work with Suspense. If the observable is a Promise, Suspense will render the fallback until it resolves to a non-undefined value.
import { useObservable, useSelector } from "@legendapp/state/react"import { Suspense } from "react"
function Test({ state$ }) { const value = useSelector(state$, { suspense: true }) return <div>{value}</div>}
export default function App() { const state$ = useObservable( new Promise((resolve) => { setTimeout(() => { resolve("hello") }, 1000) }) ) return ( <div> <div>Suspense test</div> <Suspense fallback={<div>Loading...</div>}> <Test state$={state$} /> </Suspense> </div> )}
observer
observer
is a good optimization if you have want to consume observables/selectors conditionally or if you consume many of them in one component. It inserts a single hook into the component and tracks all observables in the one hook. Because use$
normally runs three hooks, this can drastically reduce the number of hooks in your components if you use use$
many times.
In previous versions this allowed calling
get()
directly within components, but that is discouraged as of 3.0.0-beta.20. See migrating for more info.
See Observing Contexts for more about when it tracks.
import { observable } from "@legendapp/state"import { observer, use$ } from "@legendapp/state/react"
const state$ = observable({ count: 0 })
const Component = observer(function Component() { // Accessing state automatically makes this component track changes to re-render const count = use$(state$.count)
// Re-renders whenever count changes return <div>{count}</div>})
useObserve
useObserve
creates an observe which you can use to take actions when observables change. This can be effectively similar to useEffect
for observables, except that it runs when observables change and not because of a deps array changing.
Like observe
, useObserve
has an optional second callback parameter which will run after the selector, and does not track changes. This can be useful for observing an event
or a single observable
.
Note that useObserve
runs during component render, not after render like useEffect
. If you want an observer that runs after render, see useObserveEffect.
import { event } from "@legendapp/state"import { $React } from "@legendapp/state/react-web"import { useObserve, useObservable, $React } from "@legendapp/state/react"
const eventUpdateTitle = event()
function ProfilePage() { const profile$ = useObservable({ name: "" })
// This runs whenever profile changes useObserve(() => { document.title = `${profile$.name.get()} - Profile` })
// Observe a single observable with a callback when it changes useObserve(profile$.name, ({ value }) => { document.title = `${value} - Profile` })
// Observe an event with a callback when it changes useObserve(eventUpdateTitle, () => { document.title = `${profile$.name.get()} - Profile` })
return ( <div> <span>Name:</span> <$React.input $value={profile$.name} /> </div> )}
useObserveEffect
useObserveEffect
is the same as useObserve except that it runs after the component is mounted.
useWhen, useWhenReady
These are hook versions of when.
Hooks for creating local state
useObservable
The useObservable
hook creates an observable within a React component. This can be useful when state is specific to the lifetime of the component, or to hold multiple values in local state.
Its observables will not be automatically tracked for re-rendering, so you can track them the same as any other observable.
As with normal observables you can create a computed observable by just using a function.
import { observer, useObservable } from "@legendapp/state/react"
const Component = function Component() { const state$ = useObservable({ title: 'Title', first: '', last: '', profile: {...} })
const fullname$ = useObservable(() => `${state$.fname.get()} ${state$.lname.get()}`)
return ( <div> <div>{fullname$}</div> <Input text={state$.first} /> <Input text={state$.last} /> <Profile name={fullname$} /> </div> )}
useObservableReducer
useObservableReducer
works the same way as useReducer
but sets an observable rather than triggering a render.
import { useObservableReducer } from "@legendapp/state/react"
function reducer(state, action) { if (action.type === 'incremented_age') { return { age: state.age + 1 } }}const Component = () => { // Only re-renders if the return value changes const [age$, dispatch] = useObservableReducer(reducer, { age: 42 })
// Get the value of the reducer const theme = age$.get()}
Using with Context
Passing an observable object through Context gives you all the benfits of Context without the downsides, like any change to context normally re-renders all consumers.
Simply set an observable as a Context value and consume it from a child component as usual. The observable itself is a stable object so useContext will never cause a re-render - only observing contexts will be updated as usual.
import { createContext, useContext } from "react"import { observer, useObservable } from "@legendapp/state/react"
interface UserState { profile: { name: string; };}
// Create a typed context. It can have a default value of undefined because// the Provider will always be created with an Observable.const StateContext = createContext<Observable<UserState>>(undefined as any);
function App() { const state$ = useObservable({ profile: { name: "", }, })
return ( <StateContext.Provider value={state$}> <div> <Sidebar /> <Main /> </div> </StateContext.Provider> )}
const Sidebar = function Sidebar() { // StateContext will never change so this will never cause a render const state$ = useContext(StateContext)
// This component never re-renders, but name re-renders itself return ( <div> Name: <Memo>{state$.profile.name}</Memo> </div> )}
Miscellaneous hooks
useEffectOnce
This is useEffect
with a workaround in development mode to make sure it only runs once.
import { useEffectOnce } from "@legendapp/state/react"
const Component = () => { useEffectOnce(() => { console.log("mounted") }, [])}
useMount
Using observable hooks we generally avoid the built-in hooks and dependency arrays, so we have useMount
and useUnmount
hooks for convenience, which are just useEffectOnce
under the hood.
import { useMount } from "@legendapp/state/react"
const Component = () => { useMount(() => console.log("mounted"))}
useUnmount
Like the useMount
hook, useUnmount
just uses useEffectOnce
under the hood.
import { useUnmount } from "@legendapp/state/react"
const Component = () => { useUnmount(() => console.log("mounted"))}
usePauseProvider
This creates a React Context Provider with a paused$
observable. Set paused$
to true
to pause all rendering from observable changes under the context, and set it false
to resume. This applies to everything within Legend-State like observer, useSelector, $React, Memo, etc⊠But normal renders coming from React or other state is not affected.
This can be very useful to stop all updating when UI is not even visible, such as when a fullscreen modal is covering app UI or in inactivate tabs in React Native.
import { useInterval } from "usehooks-ts" import { Memo, usePauseProvider, useObservable } from '@legendapp/state/react' function App() { const { PauseProvider, isPaused$ } = usePauseProvider() const int$ = useObservable(0) useInterval(() => { int$.set((val) => val + 1) }, 100) return ( <Box center> <Button onClick={isPaused$.toggle}> <Memo>{() => (isPaused$.get() ? 'Resume' : 'Pause')}</Memo> </Button> <PauseProvider> <Memo>{int$}</Memo> </PauseProvider> </Box> ) }