LitState automatically re-renders your LitElement components, when a shared app state variable they use changes. It's like LitElement's properties, but then shared over multiple components.
It's tiny, simple but still powerful, just like LitElement and lit-html.
npm install lit-element-state
The name lit-state
is unfortunately already taken on npm, so therefore the
slightly awkward package name.
For more information and update instructions, See the changelog.
You keep your shared state in a LitState
derived class. This class contains
stateVar
variables that contain the state. This class can also contain helper
functions that modify the state. Decorate your LitElement
classes with the
observeState()
mixin. This makes your components automatically re-render
whenever a stateVar
they use changes.
import { LitState, stateVar } from 'lit-element-state';
class MyState extends LitState {
@stateVar() counter = 0;
}
export const myState = new MyState();
Or without javascript decorators:
import { LitState, stateVar } from 'lit-element-state';
class MyState extends LitState {
static get stateVars() {
return {
counter: 0
};
}
}
export const myState = new MyState();
By using the observeState()
mixin on your LitElement
class and then just
using the stateVar
variables in your render method:
import { LitElement, html } from 'lit-element';
import { observeState } from 'lit-element-state';
import { myState } from './my-state.js';
class MyComponent extends observeState(LitElement) {
render() {
return html`
<h1>Counter: ${myState.counter}</h1>
<button @click=${() => myState.counter++}></button>
`;
}
}
The components that read myState.counter
will automatically re-render when
any (other) component updates it.
In more technical words:
A component using the observeState()
mixin will re-render when any
stateVar
- which it read in the last render cycle - changes.
For more information about how to use LitState, check the docs.
When you define a stateVar
variable, LitState will observe those variables
whenever they're get or set. When using the observeState()
mixin on a
component, during the render of that component, there is a recorder active that
records any stateVar
that is accessed during the render of that component. At
the end of the render, the recorded stateVar
variables are collected and
whenever one of them changes, the component will be re-rendered. If the
re-render uses different stateVar
variables, they are again recorded and
observed for possible rerenders.
To re-render the component, the observeState()
mixin calls LitElement's
this.requestUpdate()
(with no arguments). This will enqueue an update request for the component. The
component will re-render at the end of the execution queue.
this.requestUpdate()
can be called multiple times during a particular
JavaScript event (like a click), and it will only update the component once, at
the end of the execution queue. So it doesn't matter when it is called multiple
times when multiple stateVar
variables are changed during a JavaScript event.
This is an optimization feature built-in in LitElement. LitElement uses this
optimization for it's own
properties. This
optimization works in the same way for LitState's stateVar
variables.
Also, LitElement uses lit-html, which sees which parts of the template are changed or not. And it will only re-render the HTML elements that have changes.
It is even encouraged to keep things separate. You can of course have one big
LitState
derived class which contains all global app state variables. But it
is probably cleaner if you categorize it into multiple smaller LitState
derived classes. For example, you can put each state class in a separate file,
collected in a state/
folder, and import them at the places you need.
If your state requires more hierarchy, you can also nest states. It doesn't
matter to your components how your state is structured, as long as it uses the
correct references to your stateVar
variables. Refer to the
docs
for more information about nesting states.
Just like LitElement's
properties, only a
new assign of the stateVar
triggers a re-render. For example if you have a
state like this:
MyState extends LitState {
@stateVar() myObj = {myKey: 'myValue'};
@stateVar() myArray = ['one', 'two', 'three'];
}
Then this won't trigger a re-render:
myState = new MyState();
myState.myObj.mykey = 'newValue';
myState.myArray.push('four');
You'll instead need to assign a new object to the stateVar
:
myState.myObj = {...myState.myObj, myKey: 'newValue'};
myState.myArray = [...myState.myArray, 'four'];
Watching for changes inside objects is very complex matter and would make LitState way more complicated than desirable. If you are interested in this kind of thing, check out observable-slim.
You can easily extend LitState with a custom stateVar
handler. An example of
this is the asyncStateVar,
which is a stateVar
variation that makes handling with asynchronous data
easy. To make a custom stateVar
yourself, create a class that extends from
StateVar
, exported by LitState.
Check out the documentation on this.
The big feature of web components is that they are encapsulated through the Shadow DOM. That means that their internal state isn't affected by state from the outside. And also that the component's internal state doesn't affect other elements on the page. This makes web components great for creating reusable elements. Reusable elements should have no side-effects, meaning that they shouldn't change state outside of themselves.
Reusable elements are great and we should use them a lot. When you're building a full application however, it is also desirable to have application-specific components that have application-specific side-effects. For example, changing the global app state. And it is of course desirable, that when this global app state changes, the components that use this global app state are synchronized with it.
And you can also have a reusable component that has several internal sub-components. They all might need to share some common internal state.
LitState is created for these use cases, and is meant to make it as simple as possible for the developer.
To use Redux (or something similar, like unistore) you need a lot of of boiler plate code: Actions, Action Creators and Reducers, you need to dispatch created actions and you need to map the state to your props inside your components. You have helper libraries that make it a bit easier, but I still think it is unnecessarily complicated.
I think MobX is much easier to use, because you don't need to write any boilerplate. However, MobX is a quite large library with a lot of whistles and bells. And for more advanced use-cases it can become relatively complicated to use.
I think a lot of features from MobX are not really necessary when you use LitElement. MobX is mainly created for React. Therefore MobX has optimizations aimed at how React works. LitState is specifically aimed at LitElement. And most of the optimizations MobX created for React are not required for LitElement.
See the section How does this work? to see how LitState works together with LitElement.
Also LitState doesn't try to track changes inside objects, like MobX does. That is also a reason why MobX is complicated. It's nice that you can modify objects and MobX detects that, but it's not very hard to just set a new object. That makes the source code of LitState a lot smaller and simpler, and therefore also easier to understand what is happening. Look here for more details on this.
Basically it comes down to the fact that LitState is written for, and with the same philosophy as, LitElement and lit-html. Which makes it more suitable for developers that like this philosophy.
If you however do want to use MobX with LitElement for some reason, check out lit-mobx.
LitState is brand-new. I created it because I wanted an easy way to deal with shared app state in LitElement, for my own projects. I hope it can make the lives of other developers easier too.
I want to keep LitState small and simple, just like LitElement. So I don't expect to add a lot of features. Only things that are a very common patterns for shared app state management would be suitable to include.
In any case, I will keep expanding the documentation to make the library more accessible. Also I would like to add unit tests, to automatically test the library. I don't have much experience with unit testing in JavaScript, so I need to dive into that.
If you have comments, suggestions, questions, any kind of feedback, or you want to contribute, I would be pleased to hear from you. Feel free to open an issue.
- asyncStateVar - asyncStateVar for LitState, easy handing of async data
- LitStyle - Shared component styles for LitElement
- LitDocumentEvent - Easily add listeners to the document object
- LitDocs - Utilities to create documentation for LitElement related projects