Suppose I have a redux store with this state structure:
{
items: {
"id1" : {
foo: "foo1",
bar: "bar1"
},
"id2": {
foo: "foo2",
bar: "bar2"
}
}
}
This store evolves by receiving full new values of items:
const reduceItems = function(items = {}, action) {
if (action.type === 'RECEIVE_ITEM') {
return {
...items,
[action.payload.id]: action.payload,
};
}
return items;
};
I want to display a Root view that renders a list of SubItem views, that only extract a part of the state. For example the SubItem view only cares about the foos, and should get it:
function SubItem({ id, foo }) {
return <div key={id}>{foo}</div>
}
Since I only care about "subpart" of the states, that's what I want to pass to a "dumb" Root view:
const Root = function({ subitems }) {
// subitems[0] => { id: 'id1', foo: "foo1" }
// subitems[1] => { id; 'id2', foo : "foo2" }
const children = subitems.map(SubItem);
return <div>{children}</div>;
};
I can easily connect this component to subscribe to changes in the state:
function mapStatesToProps(state) {
return {
subitems: xxxSelectSubItems(state)
}
}
return connect(mapStatesToProps)(Root)
My fundamental problem is what happens when the part of the state that I don't care about (bar
) changes.
Or even, when I receive a new value of an item, where neither foo
nor bar
has changed:
setInterval(() => {
store.dispatch({
type: 'RECEIVE_ITEM',
payload: {
id: 'id1',
foo: 'foo1',
bar: 'bar1',
},
});
}, 1000);
If I use the "naive" selector implementation:
// naive version
function toSubItem(id, item) {
const foo = item.foo;
return { id, foo };
}
function dumbSelectSubItems(state) {
const ids = Object.keys(state.items);
return ids.map(id => {
const item = state.items[id];
return toSubItem(id, item);
});
}
Then the list is a completely new object at every called, and my component gets rendered everytime, for nothing.
Of course, if I use a 'constant' selector, that always return the same list, since the connected component is pure, it is re-renderered (but that's just to illustrate connected components are pure):
// fully pure implementation
const SUBITEMS = [
{
id: 'id0',
foo: 'foo0',
},
];
function constSelectSubItems(state) {
return SUBITEMS;
}
Now this gets a bit tricky if I use an "almostConst" version where the List changes, but contains the same element.
const SUBITEM = {
id: 'id0',
foo: 'foo0',
};
function almostConstSelectSubItems(state) {
return [SUBITEM];
}
Now, predictably, since the list is different, even though the item inside is the same, the component gets rerendered every second.
This is where I though 'reselect' could help, but I'm wondering if I am not missing the point entirely. I can get reselect
to behave using this:
const reselectSelectIds = (state, props) => Object.keys(state.items);
const reselectSelectItems = (state, props) => state.items;
const reselectSelectSubItems = createSelector([reSelectIds, reSelectItems], (ids, items) => {
return ids.map(id => toSubItem(id, items));
});
But then it behaves exactly like the naive version.
So:
- is it pointless to try to memoize an array ?
- can reselect handle this ?
- should I change the organisation of the state ?
- should I just implement shouldComponentUpdate on the Root, using a "deepEqual" test ?
- should I give up on Root being a connected component, and make each LeafItems be connected components themselves ?
- could immutable.js help ?
- is it actually not an issue, because React is smart and will not repaint anything once the virtual-dom is computed ?
It's possible what I'm trying to do his meaningless, and hides an issue in my redux store, so feel free to state obvious errors.