Cannot get latest value of useState in Redux subscribe - redux

When the state in Redux is updated, if it is different from the useState of the current page, the useState in the page will be updated, but the value in the red box will not change after the update, it is always the default true.
import { useEffect, useState } from "react";
import store from "./redux";
import { useDispatch } from "react-redux";
import { setState } from "./redux/modules/menu";
function App() {
const dispatch = useDispatch();
const [baseState, setBaseState] = useState(true);
useEffect(() => {
console.log("baseState :>> ", baseState);
}, [baseState]);
useEffect(() => {
const unSubscribe = store.subscribe(() => {
console.log(store.getState().menu.state, baseState);
if (store.getState().menu.state !== baseState) {
setBaseState(store.getState().menu.state);
}
});
return () => unSubscribe();
}, []);
const buttonEvent = () => {
const storeState = store.getState().menu.state;
dispatch(setState(!storeState));
};
return (
<div className="App">
<h1>value: {baseState + ""}</h1>
<button onClick={buttonEvent}>change</button>
</div>
);
}
export default App;
run result :

So if i got your question, what you are doing is, on a button click, you are changing the redux state and on that basis, you want to change the local state.
But in your useEffect() (2nd one);
useEffect(() => {
const unSubscribe = store.subscribe(() => {
console.log(store.getState().menu.state, baseState);
if (store.getState().menu.state !== baseState) {
setBaseState(store.getState().menu.state);
}
});
return () => unSubscribe();
}, []);
You are giving an empty array as 2nd argument, which means this useEffect is going to get triggered only on the first render(similar to componentDidMount in class components), thus will never know if the redux state has changed.
Thus, to make it working, just remove them (like we have componentDidUpdate in class components).

I found the most appropriate solution, using Redux useSelector

Related

React useState() hook returns initial value [duplicate]

I am trying to learn hooks and the useState method has made me confused. I am assigning an initial value to a state in the form of an array. The set method in useState is not working for me, both with and without the spread syntax.
I have made an API on another PC that I am calling and fetching the data which I want to set into the state.
Here is my code:
<div id="root"></div>
<script type="text/babel" defer>
// import React, { useState, useEffect } from "react";
// import ReactDOM from "react-dom";
const { useState, useEffect } = React; // web-browser variant
const StateSelector = () => {
const initialValue = [
{
category: "",
photo: "",
description: "",
id: 0,
name: "",
rating: 0
}
];
const [movies, setMovies] = useState(initialValue);
useEffect(() => {
(async function() {
try {
// const response = await fetch("http://192.168.1.164:5000/movies/display");
// const json = await response.json();
// const result = json.data.result;
const result = [
{
category: "cat1",
description: "desc1",
id: "1546514491119",
name: "randomname2",
photo: null,
rating: "3"
},
{
category: "cat2",
description: "desc1",
id: "1546837819818",
name: "randomname1",
rating: "5"
}
];
console.log("result =", result);
setMovies(result);
console.log("movies =", movies);
} catch (e) {
console.error(e);
}
})();
}, []);
return <p>hello</p>;
};
const rootElement = document.getElementById("root");
ReactDOM.render(<StateSelector />, rootElement);
</script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/#babel/standalone#7/babel.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/react#17/umd/react.production.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/react-dom#17/umd/react-dom.production.min.js"></script>
Neither setMovies(result) nor setMovies(...result) works.
I expect the result variable to be pushed into the movies array.
Much like .setState() in class components created by extending React.Component or React.PureComponent, the state update using the updater provided by useState hook is also asynchronous, and will not be reflected immediately.
Also, the main issue here is not just the asynchronous nature but the fact that state values are used by functions based on their current closures, and state updates will reflect in the next re-render by which the existing closures are not affected, but new ones are created. Now in the current state, the values within hooks are obtained by existing closures, and when a re-render happens, the closures are updated based on whether the function is recreated again or not.
Even if you add a setTimeout the function, though the timeout will run after some time by which the re-render would have happened, the setTimeout will still use the value from its previous closure and not the updated one.
setMovies(result);
console.log(movies) // movies here will not be updated
If you want to perform an action on state update, you need to use the useEffect hook, much like using componentDidUpdate in class components since the setter returned by useState doesn't have a callback pattern
useEffect(() => {
// action on update of movies
}, [movies]);
As far as the syntax to update state is concerned, setMovies(result) will replace the previous movies value in the state with those available from the async request.
However, if you want to merge the response with the previously existing values, you must use the callback syntax of state updation along with the correct use of spread syntax like
setMovies(prevMovies => ([...prevMovies, ...result]));
Additional details to the previous answer:
While React's setState is asynchronous (both classes and hooks), and it's tempting to use that fact to explain the observed behavior, it is not the reason why it happens.
TLDR: The reason is a closure scope around an immutable const value.
Solutions:
read the value in render function (not inside nested functions):
useEffect(() => { setMovies(result) }, [])
console.log(movies)
add the variable into dependencies (and use the react-hooks/exhaustive-deps eslint rule):
useEffect(() => { setMovies(result) }, [])
useEffect(() => { console.log(movies) }, [movies])
use a temporary variable:
useEffect(() => {
const newMovies = result
console.log(newMovies)
setMovies(newMovies)
}, [])
use a mutable reference (if we don't need a state and only want to remember the value - updating a ref doesn't trigger re-render):
const moviesRef = useRef(initialValue)
useEffect(() => {
moviesRef.current = result
console.log(moviesRef.current)
}, [])
Explanation why it happens:
If async was the only reason, it would be possible to await setState().
However, both props and state are assumed to be unchanging during 1 render.
Treat this.state as if it were immutable.
With hooks, this assumption is enhanced by using constant values with the const keyword:
const [state, setState] = useState('initial')
The value might be different between 2 renders, but remains a constant inside the render itself and inside any closures (functions that live longer even after render is finished, e.g. useEffect, event handlers, inside any Promise or setTimeout).
Consider following fake, but synchronous, React-like implementation:
// sync implementation:
let internalState
let renderAgain
const setState = (updateFn) => {
internalState = updateFn(internalState)
renderAgain()
}
const useState = (defaultState) => {
if (!internalState) {
internalState = defaultState
}
return [internalState, setState]
}
const render = (component, node) => {
const {html, handleClick} = component()
node.innerHTML = html
renderAgain = () => render(component, node)
return handleClick
}
// test:
const MyComponent = () => {
const [x, setX] = useState(1)
console.log('in render:', x) // ✅
const handleClick = () => {
setX(current => current + 1)
console.log('in handler/effect/Promise/setTimeout:', x) // ❌ NOT updated
}
return {
html: `<button>${x}</button>`,
handleClick
}
}
const triggerClick = render(MyComponent, document.getElementById('root'))
triggerClick()
triggerClick()
triggerClick()
<div id="root"></div>
I know that there are already very good answers. But I want to give another idea how to solve the same issue, and access the latest 'movie' state, using my module react-useStateRef.
As you understand by using React state you can render the page every time the state change. But by using React ref, you can always get the latest values.
So the module react-useStateRef let you use state's and ref's together. It's backward compatible with React.useState, so you can just replace the import statement
const { useEffect } = React
import { useState } from 'react-usestateref'
const [movies, setMovies] = useState(initialValue);
useEffect(() => {
(async function() {
try {
const result = [
{
id: "1546514491119",
},
];
console.log("result =", result);
setMovies(result);
console.log("movies =", movies.current); // will give you the latest results
} catch (e) {
console.error(e);
}
})();
}, []);
More information:
react-usestsateref
I just finished a rewrite with useReducer, following #kentcdobs article (ref below) which really gave me a solid result that suffers not one bit from these closure problems.
See: https://kentcdodds.com/blog/how-to-use-react-context-effectively
I condensed his readable boilerplate to my preferred level of DRYness -- reading his sandbox implementation will show you how it actually works.
import React from 'react'
// ref: https://kentcdodds.com/blog/how-to-use-react-context-effectively
const ApplicationDispatch = React.createContext()
const ApplicationContext = React.createContext()
function stateReducer(state, action) {
if (state.hasOwnProperty(action.type)) {
return { ...state, [action.type]: state[action.type] = action.newValue };
}
throw new Error(`Unhandled action type: ${action.type}`);
}
const initialState = {
keyCode: '',
testCode: '',
testMode: false,
phoneNumber: '',
resultCode: null,
mobileInfo: '',
configName: '',
appConfig: {},
};
function DispatchProvider({ children }) {
const [state, dispatch] = React.useReducer(stateReducer, initialState);
return (
<ApplicationDispatch.Provider value={dispatch}>
<ApplicationContext.Provider value={state}>
{children}
</ApplicationContext.Provider>
</ApplicationDispatch.Provider>
)
}
function useDispatchable(stateName) {
const context = React.useContext(ApplicationContext);
const dispatch = React.useContext(ApplicationDispatch);
return [context[stateName], newValue => dispatch({ type: stateName, newValue })];
}
function useKeyCode() { return useDispatchable('keyCode'); }
function useTestCode() { return useDispatchable('testCode'); }
function useTestMode() { return useDispatchable('testMode'); }
function usePhoneNumber() { return useDispatchable('phoneNumber'); }
function useResultCode() { return useDispatchable('resultCode'); }
function useMobileInfo() { return useDispatchable('mobileInfo'); }
function useConfigName() { return useDispatchable('configName'); }
function useAppConfig() { return useDispatchable('appConfig'); }
export {
DispatchProvider,
useKeyCode,
useTestCode,
useTestMode,
usePhoneNumber,
useResultCode,
useMobileInfo,
useConfigName,
useAppConfig,
}
With a usage similar to this:
import { useHistory } from "react-router-dom";
// https://react-bootstrap.github.io/components/alerts
import { Container, Row } from 'react-bootstrap';
import { useAppConfig, useKeyCode, usePhoneNumber } from '../../ApplicationDispatchProvider';
import { ControlSet } from '../../components/control-set';
import { keypadClass } from '../../utils/style-utils';
import { MaskedEntry } from '../../components/masked-entry';
import { Messaging } from '../../components/messaging';
import { SimpleKeypad, HandleKeyPress, ALT_ID } from '../../components/simple-keypad';
export const AltIdPage = () => {
const history = useHistory();
const [keyCode, setKeyCode] = useKeyCode();
const [phoneNumber, setPhoneNumber] = usePhoneNumber();
const [appConfig, setAppConfig] = useAppConfig();
const keyPressed = btn => {
const maxLen = appConfig.phoneNumberEntry.entryLen;
const newValue = HandleKeyPress(btn, phoneNumber).slice(0, maxLen);
setPhoneNumber(newValue);
}
const doSubmit = () => {
history.push('s');
}
const disableBtns = phoneNumber.length < appConfig.phoneNumberEntry.entryLen;
return (
<Container fluid className="text-center">
<Row>
<Messaging {...{ msgColors: appConfig.pageColors, msgLines: appConfig.entryMsgs.altIdMsgs }} />
</Row>
<Row>
<MaskedEntry {...{ ...appConfig.phoneNumberEntry, entryColors: appConfig.pageColors, entryLine: phoneNumber }} />
</Row>
<Row>
<SimpleKeypad {...{ keyboardName: ALT_ID, themeName: appConfig.keyTheme, keyPressed, styleClass: keypadClass }} />
</Row>
<Row>
<ControlSet {...{ btnColors: appConfig.buttonColors, disabled: disableBtns, btns: [{ text: 'Submit', click: doSubmit }] }} />
</Row>
</Container>
);
};
AltIdPage.propTypes = {};
Now everything persists smoothly everywhere across all my pages
React's useEffect has its own state/lifecycle. It's related to mutation of state, and it will not update the state until the effect is destroyed.
Just pass a single argument in parameters state or leave it a black array and it will work perfectly.
React.useEffect(() => {
console.log("effect");
(async () => {
try {
let result = await fetch("/query/countries");
const res = await result.json();
let result1 = await fetch("/query/projects");
const res1 = await result1.json();
let result11 = await fetch("/query/regions");
const res11 = await result11.json();
setData({
countries: res,
projects: res1,
regions: res11
});
} catch {}
})(data)
}, [setData])
# or use this
useEffect(() => {
(async () => {
try {
await Promise.all([
fetch("/query/countries").then((response) => response.json()),
fetch("/query/projects").then((response) => response.json()),
fetch("/query/regions").then((response) => response.json())
]).then(([country, project, region]) => {
// console.log(country, project, region);
setData({
countries: country,
projects: project,
regions: region
});
})
} catch {
console.log("data fetch error")
}
})()
}, [setData]);
Alternatively, you can try React.useRef() for instant change in the React hook.
const movies = React.useRef(null);
useEffect(() => {
movies.current='values';
console.log(movies.current)
}, [])
The closure is not the only reason.
Based on the source code of useState (simplified below). Seems to me the value is never assigned right away.
What happens is that an update action is queued when you invoke setValue. And after the schedule kicks in and only when you get to the next render, these update action then is applied to that state.
Which means even we don't have closure issue, react version of useState is not going to give you the new value right away. The new value doesn't even exist until next render.
function useState(initialState) {
let hook;
...
let baseState = hook.memoizedState;
if (hook.queue.pending) {
let firstUpdate = hook.queue.pending.next;
do {
const action = firstUpdate.action;
baseState = action(baseState); // setValue HERE
firstUpdate = firstUpdate.next;
} while (firstUpdate !== hook.queue.pending);
hook.queue.pending = null;
}
hook.memoizedState = baseState;
return [baseState, dispatchAction.bind(null, hook.queue)];
}
function dispatchAction(queue, action) {
const update = {
action,
next: null
};
if (queue.pending === null) {
update.next = update;
} else {
update.next = queue.pending.next;
queue.pending.next = update;
}
queue.pending = update;
isMount = false;
workInProgressHook = fiber.memoizedState;
schedule();
}
There's also an article explaining the above in the similar way, https://dev.to/adamklein/we-don-t-know-how-react-state-hook-works-1lp8
I too was stuck with the same problem. As other answers above have clarified the error here, which is that useState is asynchronous and you are trying to use the value just after setState. It is not updating on the console.log() part because of the asynchronous nature of setState, it lets your further code to execute, while the value updating happens on the background. Thus you are getting the previous value. When the setState is completed on the background it will update the value and you will have access to that value on the next render.
If anyone is interested to understand this in detail. Here is a really good Conference talk on the topic.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8aGhZQkoFbQ
I found this to be good. Instead of defining state (approach 1) as, example,
const initialValue = 1;
const [state,setState] = useState(initialValue)
Try this approach (approach 2),
const [state = initialValue,setState] = useState()
This resolved the rerender issue without using useEffect since we are not concerned with its internal closure approach with this case.
P.S.: If you are concerned with using old state for any use case then useState with useEffect needs to be used since it will need to have that state, so approach 1 shall be used in this situation.
If we have to update state only, then a better way can be if we use the push method to do so.
Here is my code. I want to store URLs from Firebase in state.
const [imageUrl, setImageUrl] = useState([]);
const [reload, setReload] = useState(0);
useEffect(() => {
if (reload === 4) {
downloadUrl1();
}
}, [reload]);
const downloadUrl = async () => {
setImages([]);
try {
for (let i = 0; i < images.length; i++) {
let url = await storage().ref(urls[i].path).getDownloadURL();
imageUrl.push(url);
setImageUrl([...imageUrl]);
console.log(url, 'check', urls.length, 'length', imageUrl.length);
}
}
catch (e) {
console.log(e);
}
};
const handleSubmit = async () => {
setReload(4);
await downloadUrl();
console.log(imageUrl);
console.log('post submitted');
};
This code works to put URLs in state as an array. This might also work for you.
With custom hooks from my library, you can wait for the state values to update:
useAsyncWatcher(...values):watcherFn(peekPrevValue: boolean)=>Promise - is a promise wrapper around useEffect that can wait for updates and return a new value and possibly a previous one if the optional peekPrevValue argument is set to true.
(Live Demo)
import React, { useState, useEffect, useCallback } from "react";
import { useAsyncWatcher } from "use-async-effect2";
function TestComponent(props) {
const [counter, setCounter] = useState(0);
const [text, setText] = useState("");
const textWatcher = useAsyncWatcher(text);
useEffect(() => {
setText(`Counter: ${counter}`);
}, [counter]);
const inc = useCallback(() => {
(async () => {
await new Promise((resolve) => setTimeout(resolve, 1000));
setCounter((counter) => counter + 1);
const updatedText = await textWatcher();
console.log(updatedText);
})();
}, []);
return (
<div className="component">
<div className="caption">useAsyncEffect demo</div>
<div>{counter}</div>
<button onClick={inc}>Inc counter</button>
</div>
);
}
export default TestComponent;
useAsyncDeepState is a deep state implementation (similar to this.setState (patchObject)) whose setter can return a promise synchronized with the internal effect. If the setter is called with no arguments, it does not change the state values, but simply subscribes to state updates. In this case, you can get the state value from anywhere inside your component, since function closures are no longer a hindrance.
(Live Demo)
import React, { useCallback, useEffect } from "react";
import { useAsyncDeepState } from "use-async-effect2";
function TestComponent(props) {
const [state, setState] = useAsyncDeepState({
counter: 0,
computedCounter: 0
});
useEffect(() => {
setState(({ counter }) => ({
computedCounter: counter * 2
}));
}, [state.counter]);
const inc = useCallback(() => {
(async () => {
await new Promise((resolve) => setTimeout(resolve, 1000));
await setState(({ counter }) => ({ counter: counter + 1 }));
console.log("computedCounter=", state.computedCounter);
})();
});
return (
<div className="component">
<div className="caption">useAsyncDeepState demo</div>
<div>state.counter : {state.counter}</div>
<div>state.computedCounter : {state.computedCounter}</div>
<button onClick={() => inc()}>Inc counter</button>
</div>
);
}
var [state,setState]=useState(defaultValue)
useEffect(()=>{
var updatedState
setState(currentState=>{ // Do not change the state by get the updated state
updateState=currentState
return currentState
})
alert(updateState) // the current state.
})
Without any addtional NPM package
//...
const BackendPageListing = () => {
const [ myData, setMyData] = useState( {
id: 1,
content: "abc"
})
const myFunction = ( x ) => {
setPagenateInfo({
...myData,
content: x
})
console.log(myData) // not reflecting change immediately
let myDataNew = {...myData, content: x };
console.log(myDataNew) // Reflecting change immediately
}
return (
<>
<button onClick={()=>{ myFunction("New Content")} }>Update MyData</button>
</>
)
Not saying to do this, but it isn't hard to do what the OP asked without useEffect.
Use a promise to resolve the new state in the body of the setter function:
const getState = <T>(
setState: React.Dispatch<React.SetStateAction<T>>
): Promise<T> => {
return new Promise((resolve) => {
setState((currentState: T) => {
resolve(currentState);
return currentState;
});
});
};
And this is how you use it (example shows the comparison between count and outOfSyncCount/syncCount in the UI rendering):
const App: React.FC = () => {
const [count, setCount] = useState(0);
const [outOfSyncCount, setOutOfSyncCount] = useState(0);
const [syncCount, setSyncCount] = useState(0);
const handleOnClick = async () => {
setCount(count + 1);
// Doesn't work
setOutOfSyncCount(count);
// Works
const newCount = await getState(setCount);
setSyncCount(newCount);
};
return (
<>
<h2>Count = {count}</h2>
<h2>Synced count = {syncCount}</h2>
<h2>Out of sync count = {outOfSyncCount}</h2>
<button onClick={handleOnClick}>Increment</button>
</>
);
};
Use the Background Timer library. It solved my problem.
const timeoutId = BackgroundTimer.setTimeout(() => {
// This will be executed once after 1 seconds
// even when the application is the background
console.log('tac');
}, 1000);
// replace
return <p>hello</p>;
// with
return <p>{JSON.stringify(movies)}</p>;
Now you should see, that your code actually does work. What does not work is the console.log(movies). This is because movies points to the old state. If you move your console.log(movies) outside of useEffect, right above the return, you will see the updated movies object.

How do you use dispatch in React components with state?

I'm using React + Redux and have a number of child components <IndividualValue/> that each load a value from an API when they mount. In addition they dispatch an action which accumulates the total of these values that is displayed in another component <TotalValues />. However you can't call dispatch inside componentDidMount.
I am able to achieve this using connect and mapDispatchToProps but what is the correct way to do this with Redux and Hooks?
Key parts of my code:
class IndividualValue extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {value: 0}
const dispatch = useDispatch();
}
async componentDidMount() {
let value = axios.get(`api/{this.props.name}`).data.value;
this.setState({value: value})
dispatch(incrementTotalByValue(value)); // <--- ???
}
render() {
return (
<div>{this.props.name} = {this.state.value}</div>
)
}
}
function TotalValues() {
const total = useSelector((state) => state.counter.total)
return (
<div>
<div>
<span>{total}</span>
</div>
</div>
)
}
ReactDOM.render(
<Provider store={store}>
<IndividualValue name="nick" />
<IndividualValue name="oscar" />
<IndividualValue name="michael" />
<TotalValues />
</Provider>,
document.getElementById('root')
);
It seems that a way to achieve this is:
const [value, setValue] = useState(null);
const dispatch = useDispatch();
...
useEffect(() => {
(async () => {
let value = await axios.get(`api/{props.name}`).data.value;
setValue(value)
dispatch(incrementTotalByValue(value));
})();
}, [])
I don't know if that is the recommended way to do things with hooks. It appears useEffect can be used in a similar way to componentDidMount but there are differences and it's not a drop in replacement.
In Class Components, I usually do this:
import React, { Component } from "react";
import { connect } from "react-redux";
import { bindActionCreators } from "redux";
import { Actions as NameActions } from "../../store/ducks/actionsHere";
class Main extends Component {
render() {
return <h1>Text</h1>
}
}
const mapStateToProps = (state) => ({
data: state.data,
});
const mapDispatchToProps = (dispatch) =>
bindActionCreators(NameActions, dispatch);
export default connect(mapStateToProps, mapDispatchToProps)(Main);

Why Redux action is not Being being dispatched in Redux-Tooklit

I am using react-redux with redux and redux-toolkit. And according to this example, i created an async dispatch that calls the reducer action when resolved.
import { createSlice } from "#reduxjs/toolkit";
import axios from "axios";
export const BlogSlice = createSlice({
name: "Blog",
initialState: {
BlogList: null,
},
reducers: {
getBlogList: (state, action) => {
console.log(action.payload);
state.BlogList = action.payload;
}
},
});
export const { getBlogList } = BlogSlice.actions;
export const getBlogListAsync = (user_id) => (dispatch) => {
axios.get(`/api/blog/getblogs/${user_id}`).then((res) => {
console.log(res.data);
dispatch(getBlogList(res.data.result));
});
};
export const selectBlogList = (state) => state.Blog.BlogList;
export default BlogSlice.reducer;
I have used it in a component accordingly so that, the component dispatches getBlogListAsync and that logs the res.data but getBlogList is not being dispatched. I tried putting other console.log() but don't understand what is wrong.
A similar Slice is working perfectly with another Component.
It is hard to say for sure what's wrong here because there is nothing that is definitely wrong.
res.data.result?
You are logging res.data and then setting the blog list to res.data.result. My best guess as to your mistake is that res.data.result is not the the correct property for accessing the blogs, but I can't possibly know that without seeing your API.
console.log(res.data);
dispatch(getBlogList(res.data.result));
missing middleware?
Is there any chance that "thunk" middleware is not installed? If you are using Redux Toolkit and omitting the middleware entirely, then the thunk middleware will be installed by default. Also if this were the case you should be getting obvious errors, not just nothing happening.
it seems fine...
I tested out your code with a placeholder API and I was able to get it working properly. Maybe this code helps you identify the problem on your end. Code Sandbox Demo.
import React from "react";
import { createSlice, configureStore } from "#reduxjs/toolkit";
import axios from "axios";
import { Provider, useDispatch, useSelector } from "react-redux";
export const BlogSlice = createSlice({
name: "Blog",
initialState: {
BlogList: null
},
reducers: {
getBlogList: (state, action) => {
console.log(action.payload);
state.BlogList = action.payload;
}
}
});
export const { getBlogList } = BlogSlice.actions;
const store = configureStore({
reducer: {
Blog: BlogSlice.reducer
}
});
export const getBlogListAsync = (user_id) => (
dispatch: Dispatch
) => {
// your url `/api/blog/getblogs/${user_id}`
const url = `https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts?userId=${user_id}`; // placeholder URL
axios.get(url).then((res) => {
console.log(res.data);
// your list: res.data.result <-- double check this
const list = res.data; // placeholder list
dispatch(getBlogList(list));
});
};
export const selectBlogList = (state) => state.Blog.BlogList;
const Test = () => {
const dispatch = useDispatch();
const blogs = useSelector(selectBlogList);
const user_id = "1";
return (
<div>
<button onClick={() => dispatch(getBlogListAsync(user_id))}>
Load Blogs
</button>
<h3>Blog Data</h3>
<div>{JSON.stringify(blogs)}</div>
</div>
);
};
export default function App() {
return (
<Provider store={store}>
<Test />
</Provider>
);
}

Reference Error:Navigator not defined with nextjs

My code is like this:
import React, { useEffect } from 'react';
import alanBtn from '#alan-ai/alan-sdk-web';
const alanKey = my key;
const App = () => {
useEffect(() => {
alanBtn({
key: alanKey,
onCommand: ({ command }) => {
alert('This code was executed');
}
})
}, []);
return (
<div><h1>Alan AI News Application</h1></div>);
}
export default App;
But i am getting the error as:
Reference Error:Navigator not defined..
How to fix it?
Browser objects like window , navigator etc should be define in useEffect first before use.
const [pageURL, setPageURL] = useState("");
const [isNativeShare, setNativeShare] = useState(false);
useEffect(() => {
setPageURL(window.location.href);
if (navigator.share) {
setNativeShare(true);
}
}, []);
// Now, use can use pageURL , isNativeShare in code
This is not an issue with your Next.js code it's just the way you are supposed to call the alan-ai library.
Below is the solution that should work for you.
import React, { useEffect } from "react";
const alanKey = "my key";
function App() {
useEffect(() => {
const alanBtn = require("#alan-ai/alan-sdk-web");
alanBtn({
key: "myKey",
rootEl: document.getElementById("alan-btn")
});
}, []);
return (
<div>
<h1>Alan AI News Application</h1>
</div>
);
}
export default App;
Here is the discussion link for the same https://github.com/alan-ai/alan-sdk-web/issues/29#issuecomment-672242925.
Hope this solves your issue.
Happy Coding.

Redux Thunk not dispatching

I have installed Redux Thunk on my application and it's been working fine so far, all of the previous actions I've created are pulling out data from APIs successfully, however the following action is not even dispatching actions to my reducer, any idea what am I missing?
// my action
export const fetchClub = id => {
debugger
return (dispatch) => {
if (id){
dispatch ({type: 'START_PULLING_NIGHTCLUB'});
let targetUrl = `http://localhost:3001/nightclub`
fetch(targetUrl)
.then(res => {
debugger
return res.json()
})
.then(nightclub => dispatch({type: 'CURRENT_NIGHTCLUB', nightclubs: nightclub.result}))
.catch(error => {
console.log(error)
})
}}}
//my reducer
import {combineReducers} from "redux"
const rootReducer = combineReducers({
nightclubs: nightClubsReducer,
user: userReducer
})
export default rootReducer
function nightClubsReducer(state = {}, action) {
debugger
switch (action.type){
case 'ADD_NIGHTCLUBS':
debugger
let nightclubs = action.nightclubs
// filering the results just to show nightclubs rather than hotels
nightclubs = nightclubs.filter( function (nightclub){
return !nightclub.types.includes("lodging")
})
return {...state.nightclubs, nightclubs}
case 'CURRENT_NIGHTCLUB':
debugger
let nightclub = action.nightclub
return {...state.nightclubs, nightclub}
default:
return state
}}
function userReducer(state = {user: {logged_in: false}}, action){
let current_user = {}
switch (action.type){
case 'ADD_USER_LOCATION':
let coords = action.location.coords
return {...state.user, coords}
case 'CREATE_USER':
current_user = action.user
state.logged_in = true
return {...state.user, current_user}
case 'ADD_LOGGED_IN_USER':
current_user = action.user
if(state.user){
state.user.logged_in = action.user.logged_in}
return {...state.user, current_user}
default:
return state
}
}
I should be hitting the debugger on the first line of my nightClubsReducer however nothing happens.
My Nightclub component is connected properly as far as I'm aware:
import React, { Component } from 'react';
import Maya from '../assets/Mayaclubbio.jpg'
import '../NightClubPage.css'
import { connect } from 'react-redux';
import { fetchClub } from '../actions/NightClubs';
class NightClub extends Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.id = props.match.params.id
}
componentDidMount() {
fetchClub(this.id)
}
render() {
debugger
return (
<React.Fragment>
//HTML code
</React.Fragment>
)
}
}
const mapStateToProps = (state) => {
debugger
return {
nightclub: state.nightclubs.nightclub,
user: state.user
}
}
export default connect(mapStateToProps, { fetchClub })(NightClub);
I have no clue what could be failing as I'm using the same logic for the rest of my actions and they are working just fine.
I think calling the action from props should fix your issue
componentDidMount() {
this.props.fetchClub(this.id);
}

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