fdecampredon / rx-flux

The Flux architecture with RxJS
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RxFlux

A Flux architecture implementation based on RxJS

The Flux architecture allows you to think your application as an unidirectional flow of data, this module aims to facilitate the use of RxJS Observable as basis for defining the relations between the different entities composing your application.

Instalation

This package is still highly experimental, see #10. Until it's finalized and published, use git url to install it with npm.

RxFlux can be retrieved as an npm package :

npm install fdecampredon/rx-flux

Difference with the Original Flux

RxFlux shares more similarities with RefluxJS than with the original architecture.

Store

Usage

A Store is an RxJS Observable :

var Store = require('rx-flux').Store;

class MyStore extends Store {
  constructor(value) {
    super();
    this.setValue(value);
  }
};

var myStore = new MyStore(['foo', 'bar']);
console.log(myStore.getValue()); // ['foo', 'bar']

myStore.subscribe(function (value) {
  console.log(value); // ['foo', 'bar']
});

It also exposes a method applyOperation, this method allows to apply a transformation over the value held by the store:

var myStore = new MyStore(['foo']);

myStore.applyOperation(function (value) {
  return value.concat('bar');
});

console.log(myStore.getValue()); // ['foo', 'bar']

Operations can be canceled or confirmed :

var myStore = new MyStore([]);

var operation1 = myStore.applyOperation(function (value) {
  return value.concat('foo');
});

var operation2 = myStore.applyOperation(function (value) {
  return value.concat('bar');
});

console.log(myStore.getValue()); // ['foo', 'bar']

operation2.confirm();

console.log(myStore.getValue()); // ['foo', 'bar']

operation1.cancel();

console.log(myStore.getValue()); // ['bar']

This mechanism offers the possibility to revert the state of your application in case of failed server request, or to implements an undo/redo system.

There is 3 important rules to respect when you are using the operation system:

  • In an operation, never directly mutate the store value, but return a new object.
  • You need to confirm operations at some point to allow the store to free the internal history object, if you don't you are at risk of facing serious memory leak issues.
  • Finally operations can be executed multiple times, so they should never have side-effect.

Api

The Store class inherits from Rx.Observable, it also exposes the following methods:

You can also implements two lifecycle methods when subclassing the Store:

Action

Usage

An action is a function and an RxJS Observable, each time you call the action function it will propagate a new value:

var Action = require('rx-flux').Action;

var myAction = Action.create();

myAction.subscribe(function (value) {
  console.log(value);
});

myAction('foo'); // log 'foo'
myAction('bar'); // log 'bar'

When creating an action you can also pass as argument a map function to Action.create, the value passed to the action will be transformed by that map function, the transformed result will be notified and returned by the action call :

var Action = require('rx-flux').Action;

var myAction = Action.create(function (string) {
  return string + ' bar';
});

myAction.subscribe(function (value) {
  console.log(value);
});

var result = myAction('foo'); // log 'foo bar'
console.log(result) // log 'foo bar'

Note that the map function will always be executed, even if there is no active subscription :

var Action = require('rx-flux').Action;

var myAction = Action.create(function (string) {
  console.log(string);
  return string + ' bar';
});

myAction('foo'); // log 'foo'

An action cannot propagate an error or complete notification, if an error is thrown in the map function that error won't be catched :

var Action = require('rx-flux').Action;

var myAction = Action.create(function () {
  throw new Error('error in map function');
});

myAction.subscribe(function (value) {
  console.log(value); // will never be called
}, function (error) {
  console.log(error); // will never be called
});

try {
  myAction('foo'); // no log
} catch(e) {
  e // Error('error in map function')
}

Finally Action provide a special operator waitFor that operator takes as arguments a list of observables and insure that those observable published a new value during the action notification process before passing the notification :

var Action = require('rx-flux').Action;
var Rx = require('rx');

var myAction = Action.create();
var subject1 = new Rx.Subject();
var subject2 = new Rx.Subject();

myAction.subscribe(function () {
  console.log('handler 1'); 
  subject1.onNext();
});

myAction.waitFor(subject1, subject2).subscribe(function () {
  console.log('handler 2'); 
});

myAction.subscribe(function () {
  console.log('handler 3'); 
  subject2.onNext();
});

myAction();// logs: 'handler 1', 'handler 3', 'handler 2'

Api

Creating an action:

Action instance api:

Examples :

Original examples from the Flux repository has been ported with rx-flux, see the examples directory.