Book Image

Redux Made Easy with Rematch

By : Sergio Moreno
Book Image

Redux Made Easy with Rematch

By: Sergio Moreno

Overview of this book

Rematch is Redux best practices without the boilerplate. This book is an easy-to-read guide for anyone who wants to get started with Redux, and for those who are already using it and want to improve their codebase. Complete with hands-on tutorials, projects, and self-assessment questions, this easy-to-follow guide will take you from the simplest through to the most complex layers of Rematch. You’ll learn how to migrate from Redux, and write plugins to set up a fully tested store by integrating it with vanilla JavaScript, React, and React Native. You'll then build a real-world application from scratch with the power of Rematch and its plugins. As you advance, you’ll see how plugins extend Rematch functionalities, understanding how they work and help to create a maintainable project. Finally, you'll analyze the future of Rematch and how the frontend ecosystem is becoming easier to use and maintain with alternatives to Redux. By the end of this book, you'll be able to have total control of the application state and use Rematch to manage its scalability with simplicity.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Section 1: Rematch Essentials
6
Section 2: Building Real-World Web Apps with Rematch
11
Section 3: Diving Deeper into Rematch

Introduction to workspaces

As you'll remember from Chapter 9, Composable Plugins – Create Your First Plugin, in the Publishing to NPM section, we used a computer machine technique called symbolic linking, which helped us to test our Rematch plugin on another code base without the requirement of publishing the package to NPM.

However, this situation sometimes gets harder because linking creates a symbolic link to our project folder, also to node_modules, and sometimes we get in trouble with duplicate dependencies, or, even worse, our symbolic link breaks our development environment.

Basically, in this book, we have forced the scenario of building the same application for the web and now mobile with React Native, but our application will have the same business logic, the same data layer, the same way of fetching and accessing the data: Rematch.

To handle this situation, we could just create a Git repository with our website and the business logic and another Git...