- Published on
Start Mobx With React
- Authors
- Name
- Li WenKang
- https://x.com/liwenkang_space
Maybe two years ago, My friend Bryan suggest me to replace redux to mobx. I remember when I opened the document of mobx, I was confused by the document, and I didn't know how to start. So I gave up.
Luckily, I find an easy-to-follow tutorial today, Introduction to MobX & React in 2020.
So, Let's start!
First of all, you can create an react app by using create-react-app, then in order to support decorators
, you need to eject the app.
npm run eject
and change the package.json
to support @babel/plugin-proposal-decorators
.
{
// ...
"babel": {
"presets": ["react-app"],
"plugins": [
[
"@babel/plugin-proposal-decorators",
{
"legacy": true
}
]
]
}
}
Then, you can install mobx
and mobx-react
.
npm install mobx mobx-react
Here comes the point!
Just like redux, you need create a store to manage the state. In mobx, you can use useLocalStore
to create a store.It includes data, action and computed method.
// src/store/index.js
import React from 'react'
import { useLocalStore } from 'mobx-react'
const StoreContext = React.createContext()
const StoreProvider = ({ children }) => {
const store = useLocalStore(() => ({
// data
bugs: ['Centipede'],
// action: don't use `this`
addBug: (bug) => {
store.bugs.push(bug)
},
// computed: don't use `this`
get bugsCount() {
return store.bugs.length
},
}))
return <StoreContext.Provider value={store}>{children}</StoreContext.Provider>
}
export { StoreContext, StoreProvider }
Then, you can wrap <App>
in <StoreProvider>
, then <App>
can access the store.
// src/index.js
import React from 'react'
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom/client'
import './index.css'
import App from './App'
import reportWebVitals from './reportWebVitals'
import { StoreProvider } from './store'
const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root'))
root.render(
<React.StrictMode>
<StoreProvider>
<App />
</StoreProvider>
</React.StrictMode>
)
// If you want to start measuring performance in your app, pass a function
// to log results (for example: reportWebVitals(console.log))
// or send to an analytics endpoint. Learn more: https://bit.ly/CRA-vitals
reportWebVitals()
In order to get store in <App>
, you can use React.useContext
to get the store. If you want to make your component re-render when the store changes, you can use useObserver
.
// src/App.js
import React from 'react'
import { StoreContext } from './store'
import { useObserver } from 'mobx-react'
const BugsHeader = () => {
const store = React.useContext(StoreContext)
return useObserver(() => {
return <h1>{store.bugsCount} Bugs!</h1>
})
}
const BugsList = () => {
const store = React.useContext(StoreContext)
// It will re-render when the store changes
return useObserver(() => (
<ul>
{store.bugs.map((bug) => (
<li key={bug}>{bug}</li>
))}
</ul>
))
}
const BugsForm = () => {
const store = React.useContext(StoreContext)
const [bug, setBug] = React.useState('')
// It doesn't re-render when the store changes
return (
<form
onSubmit={(e) => {
store.addBug(bug)
setBug('')
e.preventDefault()
}}
>
<input
type="text"
value={bug}
onChange={(e) => {
setBug(e.target.value)
}}
/>
<button type="submit">Add</button>
</form>
)
}
const App = () => {
return (
<div>
<BugsHeader />
<BugsList />
<BugsForm />
</div>
)
}
export default App
So, just two hooks useLocalStore
, useObserver
you need to know to start mobx with react. In real project, you may want to have multiple stores for different components.
Have a try!