dependency injection for zustand with react context. initialize zustand stores with component props.
npm install react zustand zustand-di
Note:
zustand-di
requiresreact
andzustand
as peer dependencies.
For
[email protected]
and higher, you need[email protected]
or higher.
For
zustand@~4.0.0
, you need[email protected]
or lower.
import { create } from "zustand";
import { createContext } from "zustand-di";
// 0. (TypeScript Only) Define a store
type CounterState = {
count: number;
inc: () => void;
};
// 1. Create the context
const [Provider, useStore] = createContext<CounterState>();
// 2. Create the store
const createStore = (initialState: { count: number }) =>
create<CounterState>((set) => ({
count: initialState.count,
inc: () => set((state) => ({ count: state.count + 1 })),
}));
// 3. Use the store in a child component
function Counter() {
const { count, inc } = useStore((state) => state);
return (
<>
<button onClick={inc}>increment</button>
<div>count: {count}</div>
<>
);
}
// 4. Use the store in the app and pass in the store creator
const myInitialState = { count: 5 };
function App() {
return (
<Provider createStore={() => createStore(myInitialState)}>
<Counter />
</Provider>
);
}
This package was originally inspired by createContext
from zustand/context
that was deprecated in v4. This package is a simplified version of that implementation:
- Removes
useStoreApi
and forces the use of a selector. - Uses modern typescript features to simplify the code and reduce bundle size.
- Returns an array of the Provider and
useStore
hook to reduce bundle size and improve DX.
For a detailed explanation, check out TkDoDo's blog post.
- You can pass in props to the store creator.
- This is useful for testing and initializing the store with props.
- You can also use this to create multiple instances of the same store with different props.
This is the only export from the package. It creates a context and returns a Provider and useStore
hook.
interface State {
count: number;
}
const [Provider, useStore] = createContext<State>();
The Provider
component is used to wrap the application and initialize the store.
<Provider createStore={createStore}>
<App />
</Provider>
If you have default props, you can pass them to the Provider
component.
<Provider createStore={() => createStore(myInitialState)}>
<MyComponent />
</Provider>
The useStore
hook is used to access the store in a child component. Be sure that the child component is wrapped in the Provider
component.
function MyComponent = () => {
const storeState = useStore((state) => state);
return <div>{storeState.count}</div>;
};