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!!!FEATURE: Centralize error handling #3792

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120 changes: 120 additions & 0 deletions packages/framework-observable-react/README.md
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# @neos-project/framework-observable-react

> React bindings for @neos-project/framework-observable

This package provides a set of React [hooks](https://react.dev/reference/react/hooks) to let components interact with `Observable`s.

## API

### `useLatestValueFrom`

```typescript
// Without default value:
function useLatestValueFrom<V>(observable$: Observable<V>): null | V;

// With default value:
function useLatestValueFrom<V, D>(
observable$: Observable<V>,
defaultValue: D
): D | V;
```

`useLatestValueFrom` is a way to bind a react component the latest value emitted from an `Observable`.

#### Parameters

| Name | Description |
| ------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| `observable$` | The `Observable` to subscribe to |
| `defaultValue` (optional) | The value to default for when `observable$` hasn't emitted any values yet (defaults to `null`) |

#### Return Value

This hook returns the latest value from the provided `observable$`. If no value has been emitted from the observable yet, it returns `defaultValue` which itself defaults to `null`.

#### Example

This component will display the amount of seconds that have passed since it was first mounted:

```typescript
const clock$ = createObservable((next) => {
let i = 1;
const interval = setInterval(() => {
next(i++);
}, 1000);

return () => clearInterval(interval);
});

const MyComponent = () => {
const seconds = useLatestValueFrom(clock$, 0);

return <pre>{seconds} seconds passed</pre>;
};
```

You can combine this with `React.useMemo`, if you wish to create an ad-hoc observable:

```typescript
const MyComponent = (props) => {
const beats = useLatestValueFrom(
React.useMemo(
() =>
createObservable((next) => {
let i = 1;
const interval = setInterval(() => {
next(i++);
}, props.millisecondsPerBeat);

return () => clearInterval(interval);
}),
[props.millisecondsPerBeat]
),
0
);

return <pre>{beats} beats passed</pre>;
};
```

### `useLatestState`

```typescript
function useLatestState<V>(state$: State<V>): V;
```

`useLatestState` subscribes to a given state observable and keeps track of its latest value.

#### Parameters

| Name | Description |
| -------- | --------------------------------------- |
| `state$` | The `State` observable to keep track of |

#### Return Value

This hook returns the latest value from the given `State` observable. Initially it contains the current value of the `State` at the moment the component was first mounted.

#### Example

```typescript
const count$ = createState(0);

const MyComponent = () => {
const count = useLatestState(count$);
const handleInc = React.useCallback(() => {
count$.update((count) => count + 1);
}, []);
const handleDec = React.useCallback(() => {
count$.update((count) => count - 1);
}, []);

return (
<div>
<pre>Count {count}</pre>
<button onClick={handleInc}>+</button>
<button onClick={handleDec}>-</button>
</div>
);
};
```
12 changes: 12 additions & 0 deletions packages/framework-observable-react/package.json
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{
"name": "@neos-project/framework-observable-react",
"version": "",
"description": "React bindings for @neos-project/framework-observable",
"private": true,
"main": "./src/index.ts",
"dependencies": {
"@neos-project/framework-observable": "workspace:*",
"react": "^16.12.0"
},
"license": "GNU GPLv3"
}
11 changes: 11 additions & 0 deletions packages/framework-observable-react/src/index.ts
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/*
* This file is part of the Neos.Neos.Ui package.
*
* (c) Contributors of the Neos Project - www.neos.io
*
* This package is Open Source Software. For the full copyright and license
* information, please view the LICENSE file which was distributed with this
* source code.
*/
export {useLatestState} from './useLatestState';
export {useLatestValueFrom} from './useLatestValueFrom';
16 changes: 16 additions & 0 deletions packages/framework-observable-react/src/useLatestState.ts
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/*
* This file is part of the Neos.Neos.Ui package.
*
* (c) Contributors of the Neos Project - www.neos.io
*
* This package is Open Source Software. For the full copyright and license
* information, please view the LICENSE file which was distributed with this
* source code.
*/
import type {State} from '@neos-project/framework-observable';

import {useLatestValueFrom} from './useLatestValueFrom';

export function useLatestState<V>(state$: State<V>) {
return useLatestValueFrom(state$, state$.current);
}
41 changes: 41 additions & 0 deletions packages/framework-observable-react/src/useLatestValueFrom.ts
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/*
* This file is part of the Neos.Neos.Ui package.
*
* (c) Contributors of the Neos Project - www.neos.io
*
* This package is Open Source Software. For the full copyright and license
* information, please view the LICENSE file which was distributed with this
* source code.
*/
import React from 'react';

import type {Observable} from '@neos-project/framework-observable';

export function useLatestValueFrom<V>(observable$: Observable<V>): null | V;
export function useLatestValueFrom<V, D>(
observable$: Observable<V>,
defaultValue: D
): D | V;

export function useLatestValueFrom<V, D>(
observable$: Observable<V>,
defaultValue?: D
) {
const [value, setValue] = React.useState<null | D | V>(
defaultValue ?? null
);

React.useEffect(() => {
const subscription = observable$.subscribe({
next: (incomingValue) => {
if (incomingValue !== value) {
setValue(incomingValue);
}
}
});

return () => subscription.unsubscribe();
}, [observable$]);

return value;
}
152 changes: 152 additions & 0 deletions packages/framework-observable/README.md
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# @neos-project/framework-observable
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thank you for providing extensive documentation for these framework parts.

I think we already partially discussed the idea of the "The Client-side framework" from #3331:

@neos-project/framework-observable

The @neos-project/framework-observable package provides a very simple implementation of the Observable-pattern (see: https://github.com/tc39/proposal-observable).

Furthermore, based on Observables, it establishes two key primitives for use in the UI:

State

A State observable represents a value that changes over time. It can be asked about its current value and any subscriber will receive the current value immediately.

It also provides an update method, that allows to push the next value calculated from the current value.

Channel

A Channel observable represents a sort of message bus. A subscriber will receive all messages that have been published to the Channel since the subscription was established.

It provides a publish method to push messages onto the channel.

@neos-project/framework-react-hooks

The @neos-project/framework-react-hooks package contains a bunch of essential React hooks to allow binding state to React components.

Most notably it contains the useLatestValueFrom hook, that allows to bind Observables to components.

And for the DTO serialisation and de-serialisation (@neos-project/framework-schema) you elaborated why it makes sense to provide a custom implementation instead of using a npm library: #3331 (comment)

Regarding observers and state handling i remember having talked to you regarding using rx-js vs a custom implementation like @neos-project/framework-observable and i think the reasons for a custom implementation were customisability (limited feature scope we only need to implement what we need), smaller bundle size, and that Observable will hopefully come to native ECMA script which we definitely want to profit from if available and this can be ensured by having it all under control.
But im a little fuzzy on the details and dont quite remember it all. So it would be great to discuss this to fill in the gaps. In the end this adds complexity to our codebase and thus the benefits and downsides should be carefully considered. When we decide for this library an outlined discussion would also help future maintainers to understand our decision ;)

EDIT:
I just skimmed over the implementation and its a super slim layer so +1 from my side ;) And we could consider this dicussion closed ^^ The documentation and tests are more than the code :D

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You've summarized it perfectly :)


> Observable pattern implementation for the Neos UI

> [!NOTE]
> This package implements a pattern for which there is a WICG proposal:
> https://github.com/WICG/observable
>
> It is therefore likely that future versions of this package will use the web-native `Observable` primitive under the hood.

## API

### Observables

An `Observable` represents a sequence of values that can be *observed* from the outside. This is a powerful abstraction that allows to encapsule all kinds of value streams like:

- (DOM) Events
- Timeouts & Intervals
- Async operations & Promises
- Websockets
- etc.

An `Observable` can be created using the `createObservable` function like this:

```typescript
const numbers$ = createObservable((next) => {
next(1);
next(2);
next(3);
});
```

> [!NOTE]
> Suffixing variable names with `$` is a common naming convention to signify that a variable represents an observable.

Here, the `numbers$` observable represents the sequence of the numbers 1, 2 and 3. This observable can be subscribed to thusly:

```typescript
numbers$.subscribe((value) => {
console.log(value);
});
```

Because the `numbers$` observable emits its values immediately, the above subscription will immediately log:
```
1
2
3
```

An additional subscription would also immediately receive all 3 values. By default, oberservables are *lazy* and *single-cast*. This means, values are generated exclusively for each subscription, and the generation starts exactly when a subscriber is registered.

The usefulness of observables becomes more apparent when we introduce some asynchrony:
```typescript
const timedNumbers$ = createObservable((next) => {
let i = 1;
const interval = setInterval(() => {
next(i++);
}, 2000);

return () => clearInterval(interval);
});
```

This `timedNumbers$` observable will emit a new value every two seconds. This time, the callback used to facilitate the observable returns a function:
```typescript
// ..
return () => clearInterval(interval);
// ..
```

This function will be called when a subscription is cancelled. This is a way for observables to clean up after themselves.

If we now subscribe to `timedNumbers$` like this:
```typescript
const subscription = timedNumbers$.subscribe((value) => {
console.log(value);
});
```

The following values will be logged to the console:
```
1 (After 2 seconds)
2 (After 4 seconds)
3 (After 6 seconds)
4 (After 8 seconds)
...
```

This will go on forever, unless we call the `unsubscribe` on our `subscription` which has been the return value we've saved from `timedNumber$.subscribe(...)`. When we call `unsubscribe`, the cleanup function of the `timedNumbers$` observable will be called and so the interval will be cleared:
```typescript
subscription.unsubscribe();
```

That's all there is to it. With this small set of tools, `Observable`s can be used to encapsule all kinds of synchronous or asynchronous value streams.

They can be created from a Promise:
```typescript
async function someLongRunningOperation() {
// ...
}

const fromPromise$ = createObservable((next) => {
someLongRunningOperation().then(next);
});
```

Or DOM events:
```typescript
const clicks$ = createObservable((next) => {
const button = document.querySelector('button');
button.addEventListener('click', next);
return () => button.removeEventListener('click', next);
});
```

And there are many, many more possibilities.

### State

A `State` is a special `Observable` that can track a value over time. `State`s can be created using the `createState` function like this:

```typescript
const count$ = createState(0);
```

The `count$` state is now set to `0`. Unlike regular observables, a `State` instance can be queried for its current value:
```typescript
console.log(count$.current); // output: 0
```

Each `State` instance has an `update` method that can be used to push new values to the state observable. It takes a callback that receives the current value as its first paramater and returns the new value:

```typescript
count$.update((value) => value + 1);

console.log(count$.current); // output: 1
```

When a new subscriber is registered to a `State` instance, that subscriber immediately receives the current value:
```typescript
const count$ = createState(0);
count$.update((value) => value + 1); // nothing is logged, nobody has subscribed yet
count$.update((value) => value + 1); // nothing is logged, nobody has subscribed yet
count$.update((value) => value + 1); // nothing is logged, nobody has subscribed yet

count$.subscribe((value) => console.log(value)); // immediately logs: 3

count$.update((value) => value + 1); // logs: 4
```

Unlike regular `Observable`s, `State`s are multi-cast. This means that all subscribers receive updates at the same time, and every subscriber only receives updates that are published after the subscription has been registered.
8 changes: 8 additions & 0 deletions packages/framework-observable/package.json
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@@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
{
"name": "@neos-project/framework-observable",
"version": "",
"description": "Observable pattern implementation for the Neos UI",
"private": true,
"main": "./src/index.ts",
"license": "GNU GPLv3"
}
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