reselect memoizes ("caches") previous state trees and calculations based on said
tree. This means repeated changes and calculations are fast and efficient,
providing us with a performance boost over standard mapStateToProps
implementations.
The official documentation offers a good starting point!
There are two different kinds of selectors, simple and complex ones.
Simple selectors are just that: they take the application state and select a part of it.
const mySelector = (state) => state.get('someState');
export {
mySelector,
};
If we need to, we can combine simple selectors to build more complex ones which
get nested state parts with reselect's createSelector
function. We import other
selectors and pass them to the createSelector
call:
import { createSelector } from 'reselect';
import mySelector from 'mySelector';
const myComplexSelector = createSelector(
mySelector,
(myState) => myState.get('someNestedState')
);
export {
myComplexSelector,
};
These selectors can then either be used directly in our containers as
mapStateToProps
functions or be nested with createSelector
once again:
export default connect(createSelector(
myComplexSelector,
(myNestedState) => ({ data: myNestedState })
))(SomeComponent);
If you have a selectors.js
file next to the reducer which's part of the state
you want to select, add your selector to said file. If you don't have one yet,
add a new one into your container folder and fill it with this boilerplate code:
import { createSelector } from 'reselect';
const selectMyState = () => createSelector(
);
export {
selectMyState,
};
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