redux
Subspace can be used with redux. Subspace returns Observables
, which you can subscribe to, and if this subscription has access to the redux store, it will be able to dispatch actions when the observable emits an event.
Example
Here’s a simple example on how to setup Subspace to work with redux
:
This example is available in Github
index.js
import store from './store';
import web3 from './web3';
import Subspace from '@embarklabs/subspace';
import { myAction } from './actions';
const run = async () => {
const MyContractInstance = ...; // TODO: obtain a web3.eth.contract instance
const subspace = new Subspace(web3);
await subspace.init();
subspace.trackEvent(MyContractInstance, "MyEvent", {filter: {}, fromBlock: 1 })
.subscribe(eventData => {
store.dispatch(myAction(eventData));
});
}
run();
Handling Contract Objects
The variableMyContractInstance
is a web3.eth.Contract
object pointing to a deployed contract address. You can use a DApp framework like Embark to easily import that contract instance: import { MyContract } from './embarkArtifacts/contracts';
, or use web3.js directly (just like in the example source code)
store.js
import { createStore } from 'redux';
import {myReducer} from './reducer';
export default store = createStore(myReducer);
reducer.js
import { MY_ACTION } from "./constants";
const initialState = {
data: {}
};
export const myReducer = (state = initialState, action) => {
switch (action.type) {
case MY_ACTION:
return { data: action.eventData };
default:
return state;
}
};
constants.js
export const MY_ACTION = 'MY_ACTION';
actions.js
import {MY_ACTION} from './constants.js';
export const myAction = eventData => ({type: MY_ACTION, eventData});
Using React and Redux
A practical example can also be found inexamples/react-redux
.