Dispatching an action handled by redux-saga returns promise. It looks like redux-thunk, but with pure action creators.
class MyComponent extends React.Component {
componentWillMount() {
// `doSomething` dispatches an action which is handled by some saga
this.props.doSomething().then((detail) => {
console.log('Yaay!', detail)
}).catch((error) => {
console.log('Oops!', error)
})
}
}
redux-saga-thunk
uses Flux Standard Action to determine action'spayload
,error
etc.
There are two reasons I created this library: Server Side Rendering and redux-form.
When using redux-saga on server, you will need to know when your actions have been finished so you can send the response to the client. There are several ways to handle that case, and redux-saga-thunk
approach is the one I like most. See an example.
With redux-form, you need to return a promise from dispatch
inside your submit handler so it will know when the submission is complete. See an example
Finally, that's a nice way to migrate your codebase from redux-thunk
to redux-saga
, since you will not need to change how you dispatch your actions, they will still return promises.
$ npm install --save redux-saga-thunk
Add middleware
to your redux configuration (before redux-saga middleware):
import { createStore, applyMiddleware } from 'redux'
import createSagaMiddleware from 'redux-saga'
import { middleware as thunkMiddleware } from 'redux-saga-thunk'
^
const sagaMiddleware = createSagaMiddleware()
const store = createStore({}, applyMiddleware(thunkMiddleware, sagaMiddleware))
^
Add meta.thunk
to your actions and receive thunk
on response actions:
const resourceCreateRequest = data => ({
type: 'RESOURCE_CREATE_REQUEST', // you can name it as you want
payload: data,
meta: {
thunk: true
^
}
})
const resourceCreateSuccess = (detail, thunk) => ({
^
type: 'RESOURCE_CREATE_SUCCESS', // name really doesn't matter
payload: detail, // promise will return payload
meta: {
thunk
^
}
})
const resourceCreateFailure = (error, thunk) => ({
^
type: 'RESOURCE_CREATE_FAILURE',
error: true, // redux-saga-thunk will use this to determine if that's a failed action
payload: error,
meta: {
thunk
^
}
})
redux-saga-thunk
will automatically transform your request action and inject a key
into it.
Handle actions with redux-saga
like you normally do, but you'll need to grab meta.thunk
from the request action and pass it to the response actions:
// thunk will be transformed in something like 'RESOURCE_CREATE_REQUEST_1234567890123456_REQUEST'
// the 16 digits in the middle are necessary to handle multiple thunk actions with same type
function* createResource() {
while(true) {
const { payload, meta } = yield take('RESOURCE_CREATE_REQUEST')
^
try {
const detail = yield call(callApi, payload)
yield put(resourceCreateSuccess(detail, meta.thunk))
^
} catch (e) {
yield put(resourceCreateFailure(e, meta.thunk))
^
}
}
}
Dispatch the action from somewhere. Since that's being intercepted by thunkMiddleware
cause you set meta.thunk
on the action, dispatch will return a promise.
store.dispatch(resourceCreateRequest({ title: 'foo' })).then((detail) => {
// detail is the action payload property
console.log('Yaay!', detail)
}).catch((error) => {
// error is the action payload property
console.log('Oops!', error)
})
Or use it inside sagas with put.resolve
:
function *someSaga() {
try {
const detail = yield put.resolve(resourceCreateRequest({ title: 'foo' }))
console.log('Yaay!', detail)
} catch (error) {
console.log('Oops!', error)
}
}
To use isPending
and hasFailed
selectors, you'll need to add the thunkReducer
to your store:
import { combineReducers } from 'redux'
import { reducer as thunkReducer } from 'redux-saga-thunk'
const reducer = combineReducers({
thunk: thunkReducer,
// your reducers...
})
Now you can use selectors on your containers:
import { isPending, hasFailed } from 'redux-saga-thunk'
const mapStateToProps = state => ({
loading: isPending(state, 'RESOURCE_CREATE_REQUEST'),
error: hasFailed(state, 'RESOURCE_CREATE_REQUEST')
})
Tells if an action is pending
Parameters
Examples
const mapStateToProps = state => ({
fooIsPending: isPending(state, 'FOO'),
fooOrBarIsPending: isPending(state, ['FOO', 'BAR']),
anythingIsPending: isPending(state)
})
Returns boolean
Tells if an action has failed
Parameters
Examples
const mapStateToProps = state => ({
fooHasFailed: hasFailed(state, 'FOO'),
fooOrBarHasFailed: hasFailed(state, ['FOO', 'BAR']),
anythingHasFailed: hasFailed(state)
})
Returns boolean
MIT © Diego Haz