baret

1.2.0 • Public • Published

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Baret

Baret is a library that allows you to embed Bacon.js observables into React Virtual DOM. Embedding observables into VDOM has the following benefits:

  • It allows you to use only functional components, because you can then use observables for managing state and ref for component lifetime, leading to more concise code.
  • It helps you to use React in an algorithmically efficient way:
    • The body of a functional component is evaluated only once each time the component is mounted.
    • Only elements that contain embedded observables are rerendered when changes are pushed through observables. An update to a deeply nested VDOM element can be an O(1) operation.

Using Baret couldn't be simpler. You just import React from "baret" and you are good to go.

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Contents

Tutorial

To use Baret, you simply import it as React:

import React from "baret"

and you can then write React components:

const oncePerSecond = Bacon.interval(1000).toProperty()
 
const Clock = () =>
  <div>
    The time is {oncePerSecond.map(() => new Date().toString())}.
  </div>

with VDOM that can have embedded Bacon.js observables.

NOTE: The result, like the Clock above, is just a React component. If you export it, you can use it just like any other React component and even in modules that do not import baret.

Reference

baret-lift attribute

Baret only lifts built-in HTML elements implicitly. The baret-lift attribute on a non-primitive element instructs Baret to lift the element.

For example, you could write:

import * as RR from "react-router"
import React   from "baret"
 
const Link1 = ({...props}) => <RR.Link baret-lift {...props}/>

to be able to use Link1 with embedded Bacon.js observables:

<Link1 href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rbm6GXllBiw"
       ref={elem => elem && elem.focus()}>
  {Bacon.sequentially(1000, [3, 2, 1, "Boom!"])}
</Link1>

Note that the ref attribute is only there as an example to contrast with $$ref.

fromBacon(observableVDOM)

fromBacon allows one to convert a Bacon observable of React elements into a React element. It is useful in case the top-most element of a component depends on a Bacon observable.

For example:

import {fromBacon} from "baret"
import {ifte} from "baret.util"
 
const Chosen = ({choice}) =>
  fromBacon(ifte(choice, <True/>, <False/>))

Here ifte from baret-util returns an observable that is <True/> when choice is true and otherwise <False/>.

Note that the point of using fromBacon in the above example is that we don't want to wrap the ifte(...) inside an additional element like this:

const Chosen = ({choice}) =>
  <div>
    {ifte(choice, <True/>, <False/>)}
  </div>

fromClass(Component)

fromClass allows one to lift a React component.

For example:

import * as RR from "react-router"
import {fromClass} from "baret"
 
const Link2 = fromClass(RR.Link)

WARNING: A difficulty with lifting components is that you will then need to use the $$ref attribute, which is not necessary when using baret-lift to lift an element.

$$ref attribute

The $$ref attribute on an element whose component is lifted using fromClass

<Link2 href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rbm6GXllBiw"
       $$ref={elem => elem && elem.focus()}>
  {Bacon.sequentially(1000, [3, 2, 1, "Boom!"])}
</Link2>

does the same thing as the ordinary JSX ref attribute: JSX/React treats ref as a special case and it is not passed to components, so a special name had to be introduced for it.

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npm i baret

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