memcord
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1.0.0-1 • Public • Published

memcord

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Record objects that return reference-equal values when you repeat previous updates.

Install with npm install memcord --save.

import { createMemcord } from 'memcord'
 
// Create a new record with the given values
const model = createMemcord({ value: 'koala' })
 
// Access values like a normal record
console.log(model.value) // koala
 
// Repeatedly setting the same value will return reference-equal objects.
const newRecord1 = model.set('value', 'kangaroo')
const newRecord2 = model.set('value', 'kangaroo')
 
console.log(model.value) // koala
console.log(newRecord1.value) // kangaroo
console.log(newRecord2.value) // kangaroo
 
console.log(newRecord1 === newRecord2) // true

Why?

Memcords let you use records as React props, without breaking PureComponent.

In large React applications, it is important for performance that your props can be compared by reference equality. Without reference equality, PureComponent can't provide any performance wins -- making performance optimization a much harder problem.

Primitive props (i.e. strings and numbers) will always work as expected, making them easy to use. However, objects present a problem; if you want to update an immutable object in each render cycle, they'll never be reference-equal -- even if their values are equivalent!

const model = { value: 'kangaroo' }
 
const newModel1 = { value: 'koala' }
const newModel2 = { value: 'koala' }
 
console.log(newModel1 === newModel2) // false!

Memcords detect repeated changes and return identical values, simplifying the use of records as props.

// Create new record with the given values
const model = createMemcord({ value: 'koala' })
 
// Repeatedly setting the same value will return reference-equal objects.
const newRecord1 = model.set('value', 'kangaroo')
const newRecord2 = model.set('value', 'kangaroo')
 
console.log(newRecord1 === newRecord2) //true

Usage

createMemcord(values, equals?)

Create a memoized record.

You can also customize how the memcord checks for equality by passing in a comparison function as the second argument. By default, it will use reference equality.

import { createMemcord } from 'memcord'
 
const data = createMemcord({ value: 'kangaroo' })
 
console.log(data.value)         // 'kangaroo'
console.log(data.error)         // undefined
 
 
const nextData = createMemcord({ value: 'kangaroo' })
 
// Two memcords created with separate calls to `createMemcord`
// will never be equal, even if they share the same properties.
console.log(nextData === data)  // false

set(key, value)

Set values with set. Repeating the same set will return the same record.

const newData1 = data.set('value', 'dropbear')
 
console.log(newData1.value)        // 'dropbear'
console.log(newData1 !== data)     // true
 
 
const newData2 = data.set('value', 'dropbear')
 
console.log(newData2.value)        // 'dropbear'
console.log(newData2 === newData1) // true

merge(values)

You update multiple value at a time with merge.

const merged1 = data.merge({ value: 'giant koala', error: 'extinct' })
 
console.log(merged1.value)        // 'giant koala'
console.log(merged1.error)        // 'extinct'
 
const merged2 = data.merge({ value: 'giant koala', error: 'extinct' })
 
console.log(merged1 === merged2)  // true

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Install

npm i memcord

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Version

1.0.0-1

License

MIT

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Collaborators

  • jamesknelson