Book Image

Learning Redux

By : Daniel Bugl
Book Image

Learning Redux

By: Daniel Bugl

Overview of this book

The book starts with a short introduction to the principles and the ecosystem of Redux, then moves on to show how to implement the basic elements of Redux and put them together. Afterward, you are going to learn how to integrate Redux with other frameworks, such as React and Angular. Along the way, you are going to develop a blog application. To practice developing growing applications with Redux, we are going to start from nothing and keep adding features to our application throughout the book. You are going to learn how to integrate and use Redux DevTools to debug applications, and access external APIs with Redux. You are also going to get acquainted with writing tests for all elements of a Redux application. Furthermore, we are going to cover important concepts in web development, such as routing, user authentication, and communication with a backend server After explaining how to use Redux and how powerful its ecosystem can be, the book teaches you how to make your own abstractions on top of Redux, such as higher-order reducers and middleware. By the end of the book, you are going to be able to develop and maintain Redux applications with ease. In addition to learning about Redux, you are going be familiar with its ecosystem, and learn a lot about JavaScript itself, including best practices and patterns.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Solving generic problems with Redux

You may noticed that as your application grows, there will be common patterns in your application logic. For example, you may be doing the same kind of work for different kinds of data. With the techniques you have learned in this chapter, you can reduce code duplication by reusing the common logic by putting it into a higher-order function.

There are multiple ways to extend a Redux/React application:

  • Higher-order reducers (such as redux-undo)
  • Higher-order action creators (such as generic data fetching from an API)
  • Higher-order components (such as <Provider>)
  • Middleware (such as redux-logger)

The last concept, middleware, extends the Redux store directly, and will be discussed in the next chapter (Chapter 12, Extending the Redux Store using Middleware). The other concepts all use higher-order functions to extend Redux/React concepts...