Book Image

Flux Architecture

By : Adam Boduch
Book Image

Flux Architecture

By: Adam Boduch

Overview of this book

Whilst React has become Facebook’s poster-child for clean, complex, and modern web development, it has quietly been underpinned by its simplicity. It’s just a view. The real beauty in React is actually the architectural pattern that handles data in and out of React applications: Flux. With Flux, you’re able to build data-rich applications that engage your users, and scale to meet every demand. It is a key part of the Facebook technology stack that serves billions of users every day. This book will start by introducing the Flux pattern and help you get an understanding of what it is and how it works. After this, we’ll build real-world React applications that highlight the power and simplicity of Flux in action. Finally, we look at the landscape of Flux and explore the Alt and Redux libraries that make React and Flux developments easier. Filled with fully-worked examples and code-first explanations, by the end of the book, you'll not only have a rock solid understanding of the architecture, but will be ready to implement Flux architecture in anger.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Flux Architecture
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Bare bone views


We've made some progress with our skeleton stores to the point where we're ready to start looking at skeleton views. These are simple classes, much in the same spirit as stores are, except we're not actually rendering anything to the DOM. The idea with these bare bone views is to affirm the sound infrastructure of our architecture, and that these view components are in fact getting the information they expect. This is crucial because the views are the final item in the Flux data-flow, so if they're not getting what they need, when they need it, we need to go back and fix our stores.

In this section, we'll discuss how our bare-boned views can help us more quickly identify when stores are missing a particular piece of information. Then, we'll look at how these views can help us identify potential actions in our Flux application.

Finding missing data

The first activity we'll perform with our bare bone views is figuring out whether or not the stores are passing along all the essential...