npm install --save photonic
A stateful component called UserPage that fetches and renders data about a user.
import React from 'react';
import { stateful } from 'photonic';
// Define a component for each possible state of the UserPage.
const User = ({ user }) => <div>{user.name}</div>;
const Fetching = () => <div>Fetching...</div>;
const FetchFailed = ({ errorStr }) => <div>{errorStr}</div>;
/*
On each render, Photonic will find the currently active node
in the decision tree and render it. For example, the tree below
has the following rules:
- The first decision point has two branches: one for when state.user exists
and one for when it is undefined.
- When the user exists, just show the User component.
- The undefined branch further splits into two branches:
- Show 'Fetching' when there's no data and we're fetching the user from
the server.
- Show FetchFailed when there was an error fetching the data
*/
const tree = [
{
show: User,
withProps: ({ state }) => ({ user: state.user }),
when: ({ state }) => state.user !== undefined
},
{
when: ({ state }) => state.user === undefined,
show: [
{
show: Fetching,
when: ({ state }) => state.fetching
},
{
show: FetchFailed,
withProps: ({ props }) => ({ errorStr: props.errorStr }),
when: ({ state }) => !state.loading && state.fetchFailed
}
]
}
];
class UserPage extends React.Component {
componentWillMount() {
this.setState({ fetching: true });
fetchUser()
.then(user => this.setState({ user, fetchFailed: false, fetching: false }))
.fail(() => this.setState({ fetchFailed: true, fetching: false }));
}
render() {
return stateful(this, tree)();
}
}
A node is an object that describes a decision point in the decision tree.
{
show: a React component (for leaf nodes) or another tree
withProps: props to pass to `show` (for leaf nodes)
when: boolean condition
}
You can think of the keys as a little story: Render show
with the props withProps
if when
is true.
These are the possible values for each key:
{
show: React component
withProps: object | function returning object | undefined
when: boolean | function returning boolean
}
In dev mode, Photonic will check the when
condition for all branches out of a node. If multiple branches from one node are active then Photonic will throw a warning to let the developer know that the branches are not exclusive. In production, it picks the first active branch and returns for better performance..
Call this function with your component instance and a decision tree. It will render the active node.
import { stateful } from 'photonic';
const tree = [/*...*/];
class ImStateful extends React.Component {
render() {
return stateful(this, tree);
}
}
You can also define stateless functional components.
import React from 'react';
import { sfc } from 'photonic';
export const FooOrBar = sfc([
{
show: Foo,
when: ({ foo }) => foo === true
},
{
show: Bar,
when: ({ foo }) => !foo
}
]);
Photonic uses order independent matching to determine which node is active. This means that you cannot assume that the first branch returned false when you are writing the condition for the second branch for a given node. I.e. each when
condition must independently determine if the branch is active. This helps you to identify when states are actually independent or if they can be combined into a single state.
const tree = [
{
show: Foo,
when: ({ state }) => state.a
},
{
show: Bar,
when: ({ state }) => {
// This condition cannot assume that it is run after the
// `when` condition from Foo just because it comes after it in this array.
// e.g. it cannot assume that `state.a` is false.
return !state.a;
}
}
]
If you accidentally write overlapping branches (i.e. multiple return true for some state) then Photonic will throw a warning in the console (in dev mode only). For example, both Foo and Bar will be active if state.a < 10.
const tree = [
{
show: Foo,
when: {{ state }} => state.a < 5,
},
{
show: Bar,
when: ({ state }) => state.a < 10
}
]