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Lucas Lira Gomes
Lucas Lira Gomes

Posted on • Originally published at x8lucas8x.com on

Shaping the Redux state

I've being using redux since early 2016 and no doubt I learned a lot through the process. Transitioning from thunk to redux saga for easier testing and greater flexibility, adopting reselect to prevent costly re-renders, usingimmer to tame our reducers when plain destructuring and ramda revealed their shortcomings, including normalizr to facilitate data normalization across reducers sharing action types, and even materialising past learnings through my own redux abstraction layer (aka redux data models). More on redux data models on another post.

One thing though required a particularly iterative process. That was how our team have being shaping reducers' state. As you might know there is no convention forthat. So one day you might find yourself with a requirement for an user list page. After creating an endpoint for retrieving the list data, you might think you could simply represent all that with the following reducer state:

{
  list: [
    {...},
    ...
  ],
}

Time passes by and an user details page is now in need. So you could go ahead and filter the list array all the time for a given user entry, assuming a non paginated endpoint, but it turns out the details page requires a few extra fields that you don't need for the list page. Perhaps those extra fields are expensive to generate for multiple objects, so you'd rather not include them in the list endpoint, or you would rather have the list endpoint as lean as possible. So now, although you could be altering the list array, you are more likely to just add a data object, such as in:

{
  list: [
    {...},
    ...
  ],
  data: {
    ...
  }
}

Data object that are likely to be used in the user details page only, as if redux was some sort of database. Been there, done that, but not particularly proud of it.

One of the many problems of just using redux as a database, therefore tending to duplicate data in multiple places when convenient, after all redux is just a means to an end, is clearly the fact that you no longer have a single source of truth. In the event you create yet another user related page, should you read from list or data, when looking for the most up to date version of that something? Oh, but I'm ensuring that my reducers update both when interacting with the backend. Good, but that's definitely not foolproof. One of those other reducers of yours might be just lacking the proper logic to keep them in sync. And now you have outdated data out there.

Let's say you re-fetch the data while navigating through different pages.Perhaps this address the outdated data issue, at the expense of extra burden on the backend, but not everything is about the backend state. What about all the intermittent state your UI might need, such as draft changes on top of the backend data or auto-save snapshots? Those might be necessary to keep, even though you navigated to a different page. What about re-fetching data only when the backend data has changed? That still does not address the fact that, given duplication, not all state mirrors backend's data.

So it seems we might be better of avoiding data duplication by referencing ids in the list array, instead of simply storing whatever payload we get from the backend. That way a data entry is our single representation of any given user. It goes without saying that memoization is assumed when pursuing this path, which you should be employing nevertheless. Back to the reducer shape, one could rightly assume a reducer shape such as:

{
  list: ['oneId', 'anotherId'],
  data: {
    oneId: {
      ...
    },
    anotherId: {
      ...
    }
  }
}

That's already an improvement, but there's more to be done. Naming things properly for one. List and data keys are not very descriptive. If it was named after the domain it represents that would be much better. Say:

{
  // userIdOrder, userIdOrdering, ..., are all good alternatives!
  userIds: ['oneId', 'anotherId'],
  userById: {
    oneId: {
      ...
    },
    anotherId: {
      ...
    }
  }
}

Small changes, but that keep it easier to reason about the state's content. I particularly appreciate the someThingByOtherThing pattern, especially because you might have the need to reference users by other things that not ids. I've had that need once. That is, to reference an entry by its alias for instance.So it made sense to maintain a somethingByAliases, which naturally would just reference an id in somethingById, so as not to duplicate data. As in:

{
  userIds: ['oneId', 'anotherId'],
  userByAliases: {
    aliasForOneId: 'oneId',
    aliasForAnotherId: 'anotherId',
  },
  userById: {
    oneId: {
      ...
    },
    anotherId: {
      ...
    }
  }
}

Naming changes apart, another thing to take into account is where to place metadata, perhaps without a counterpart in the backend. Think boolean flags, pagination parameters, and what not. Most often than not the first one that come to mind is a loading flag or a current state enum. Although those might be part of the original userById content, I'd rather keep them separate. If not for anything, for the fact that them changing shouldn't invalidate components relying on the userById content, especially when memoization is in place.

{
  userIds: ['oneId', 'anotherId'],
  userByAliases: {
    'aliasForOneId': 'oneId',
    'aliasForAnotherId': 'anotherId',
  },
  loadingById: {
    ...
  },
  userById: {
    oneId: {
      ...
    },
    anotherId: {
      ...
    }
  }
}

All simple guidelines I follow, which have proved to be useful and future proof in my own use cases. Does it make sense for you? Do you have your own tips to share? Please follow up on the comments below.

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