re-frame/docs/MentalModelOmnibus.md

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## Table Of Contents
- [Mental Model Omnibus](#mental-model-omnibus)
- [What is the problem?](#what-is-the-problem)
- [Guiding Philosophy](#guiding-philosophy)
- [It Does Physics](#it-does-physics)
- [It does Event Sourcing](#it-does-event-sourcing)
- [It does a reduce](#it-does-a-reduce)
- [It does FSM](#it-does-fsm)
- [Data Oriented Design](#data-oriented-design)
- [Derived Data](#derived-data)
- [Prefer Dumb Views - Part 1](#prefer-dumb-views---part-1)
- [Prefer Dumb Views - Part 2](#prefer-dumb-views---part-2)
- [Full Stack](#full-stack)
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## Mental Model Omnibus
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> If a factory is torn down but the rationality which produced it is
left standing, then that rationality will simply produce another
factory. If a revolution destroys a government, but the systematic
patterns of thought that produced that government are left intact,
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then those patterns will repeat themselves. <br>
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> -- Robert Pirsig, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
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The re-frame tutorials initially focus on the **domino
narrative**. The goal is to efficiently explain the mechanics,
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and get you reading and writing code ASAP.
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**But** there are other interesting perspectives on re-frame
which will deepen your understanding of its design,
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and help you to get the best from it.
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This tutorial is a tour
of these ideas, justifications and insights. It is a little rambling, but I
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believe you'll be glad you persisted. By the end, I'm hoping you'll have had at least one
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"Oh, now I get it" moment.
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## What is the problem?
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First, we decided to build our SPA apps with ClojureScript, then we
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choose [Reagent], then we had a problem. It was August 2014.
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For all its considerable brilliance, Reagent (+ React)
delivers only the 'V' part of a traditional MVC framework.
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But apps involve much more than V. We build quite complicated
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SPAs which can run to 50K lines of code. So, I wanted to know:
where does the control logic go? How is state stored & manipulated? etc.
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We read up on [Pedestal App], [Flux],
[Hoplon], [Om], early [Elm], etc and re-frame is the architecture that
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emerged. Since then, we've tried to keep an eye on further developments like the
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Elm Architecture, Om.Next, BEST, Cycle.js, Redux, etc. They have taught us much
although we have often made different choices.
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re-frame does have parts which correspond to M, V, and C, but they aren't objects.
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It is sufficiently different in nature
from (traditional, Smalltalk) MVC that calling it MVC would be confusing. I'd
love an alternative.
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Perhaps it is a RAVES framework - Reactive-Atom Views Event
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Subscription framework (I love the smell of acronym in the morning).
Or, if we distill to pure essence, `DDATWD` - Derived Data All The Way Down.
*TODO:* get acronym down to 3 chars! Get an image of stacked Turtles for `DDATWD`
insider's joke, conference T-Shirt.
## Guiding Philosophy
__First__, above all we believe in the one true [Dan Holmsand], creator of Reagent, and
his divine instrument the `ratom`. We genuflect towards Sweden once a day.
__Second__, we believe in ClojureScript, immutable data and the process of building
a system out of pure functions.
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__Third__, we believe in the primacy of data, for the reasons described in
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the main README. re-frame has a data oriented, functional architecture.
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__Fourth__, we believe that Reactive Programming is one honking good idea.
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How did we ever live without it? It is a quite beautiful solution to one half of re-frame's
data conveyance needs, **but** we're cautious about taking it too far - as far as, say, cycle.js.
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It doesn't take over everything in re-frame - it just does part of the job.
__Finally__, many years ago I programmed briefly in Eiffel where I learned
about [command-query separation](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Command%E2%80%93query_separation).
Each generation of
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programmers seems destined to rediscover this principle - CQRS is the recent re-rendering.
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And yet we still see read/write `cursors` and two way data binding being promoted as a good thing.
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Please, just say no. As your programs get bigger, the use of these two-way constructs
will encourage control logic into all the
wrong places and you'll end up with a tire fire of an Architecture.
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## It does Event Sourcing
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How did that error happen, you puzzle, shaking your head ruefully?
What did the user do immediately prior? What
state was the app in that this event was so problematic?
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To debug, you need to know this information:
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1. the state of the app immediately before the exception
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2. What final `event` then caused your app to error
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Well, with re-frame you need to record (have available):
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1. A recent checkpoint of the application state in `app-db` (perhaps the initial state)
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2. all the events `dispatch`ed since the last checkpoint, up to the point where the error occurred
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Note: that's all just data. **Pure, lovely loggable data.**
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If you have that data, then you can reproduce the error.
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re-frame allows you to time travel, even in a production setting.
Install the "checkpoint" state into `app-db`
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and then "play forward" through the collection dispatched events.
The only way the app "moves forwards" is via events. "Replaying events" moves you
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step by step towards the error causing problem.
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This is perfect for debugging assuming, of course, you are in a position to capture
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a checkpoint of `app-db`, and the events since then.
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Here's Martin Fowler's [description of Event Sourcing](http://martinfowler.com/eaaDev/EventSourcing.html).
## It does a reduce
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Here's an interesting way of thinking about the re-frame
data flow ...
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**First**, imagine that all the events ever dispatched in a
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certain running app were stored in a collection (yes, event sourcing again).
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So, if when the app started, the user clicked on button X
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the first item in this collection would be the event
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generated by that button, and then, if next the user moved
a slider, the associated event would be the next item in
the collection, and so on and so on. We'd end up with a
collection of event vectors.
**Second**, remind yourself that the `combining function`
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of a `reduce` takes two arguments:
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1. the current state of the reduction and
2. the next collection member to fold in.
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Then notice that `reg-event-db` event handlers take two arguments also:
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1. `db` - the current state of `app-db`
2. `v` - the next event to fold in
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Interesting. That's the same as a `combining function` in a `reduce`!!
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So now we can introduce the new mental model: at any point in time,
the value in `app-db` is the result of performing a `reduce` over
the entire `collection` of events dispatched in the app up until
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that time. The combining function for this reduce is the set of event handlers.
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It is almost like `app-db` is the temporary place where this
imagined `perpetual reduce` stores its on-going reduction.
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Now, in the general case, this perspective breaks down a bit,
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because of `reg-event-fx` (has `-fx` on the end, not `-db`) which
allows:
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1. event handlers can produce `effects` beyond just application state
changes.
2. Event handlers sometimes need coeffects (arguments) in addition to `db` and `v`.
But, even if it isn't the full picture, it is a very useful
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and interesting mental model. We were first exposed to this idea
via Elm's early use of `foldp` (fold from the past), which was later enshrined in the
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Elm Architecture.
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And for the love of all that is good, please watch this terrific
[StrangeLoop presentation ](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fU9hR3kiOK0) (40 mins).
See what happens when you re-imagine a database as a stream!! Look at
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all the problems that evaporate.
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Think about that: shared mutable state (the root of all evil),
re-imagined as a stream!! Blew my socks off.
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If, by chance, you ever watched that video (you should!), you might then twig to
the idea that `app-db` is really a derived value ... the video talks
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a lot about derived values. So, yes, app-db is a derived value of the `perpetual reduce`.
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And yet, it acts as the authoritative source of state in the app. And yet,
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it isn't, it is simply a piece of derived state. And yet, it is the source. Etc.
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This is an infinite loop of sorts - an infinite loop of derived data.
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## It does FSM
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> Any sufficiently complicated GUI contains an ad hoc,
> informally-specified, bug-ridden, slow implementation
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> of a hierarchical Finite State Machine <br>
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> -- [me failing to impress my two twitter followers]
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`event handlers` collectively
implement the "control" part of an application. Their logic
interprets arriving events in the context of existing state,
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and they compute what the new state of the application.
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`events` act, then, a bit like the `triggers` in a finite state machine, and
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the event handlers act like the rules which govern how the state machine
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moves from one logical state to the next.
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In the simplest
case, `app-db` will contain a single value which represents the current "logical state".
For example, there might be a single `:phase` key which can have values like `:loading`,
`:not-authenticated` `:waiting`, etc. Or, the "logical state" could be a function
of many values in `app-db`.
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Not every app has lots of logical states, but some do, and if you are implementing
one of them, then formally recognising it and using a technique like
[State Charts](https://www.amazon.com/Constructing-User-Interface-Statecharts-Horrocks/dp/0201342782)
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will help greatly in getting a clean design and fewer bugs.
The beauty of re-frame from a FSM point of view is that all the state is
in one place - unlike OO systems where the state is distributed (and synchronized)
across many objects. So implementing your control logic as a FSM is
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fairly natural in re-frame, whereas it is often difficult and
contrived in other kinds of architecture (in my experience).
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So, members of the jury, I put it to you that:
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- the first 3 dominoes implement an [Event-driven finite-state machine](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event-driven_finite-state_machine)
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- the last 3 dominoes a rendering of the FSM's current state for the user to observe
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Depending on your app, this may or may not be a useful mental model,
but one thing is for sure ...
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Events - that's the way we roll.
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### What Of This Romance?
My job is to be a relentless cheerleader for re-frame, right?
The gyrations of my Pom-Poms should be tectonic,
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but the following quote makes me smile. It should
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be taught in all ComSci courses.
> We begin in admiration and end by organizing our disappointment <br>
> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; -- Gaston Bachelard (French philosopher)
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Of course, that only applies if you get passionate about a technology
(a flaw of mine).
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But, no. No! Those French Philosophers and their pessimism - ignore him!!
Your love for re-frame will be deep, abiding and enriching.
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## Data Oriented Design
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In the readme ... XXX
Events are data - `[:delete-item 42]`
That's almost like a function call `(delete-item 42)`. Kinda. So why prefer data?
Using data gives us:
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- easier hot reloading ??
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- late binding
- logability and event sourcing
- a more flexible version of "partial" (curring)
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## Full Stack
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If you like re-frame and want to take the principles full-stack, then
these resource might be interesting:
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Commander Pattern
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B1-gS0oEtYc
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Datalog All The Way Down
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aI0zVzzoK_E
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***
Previous: [This Repo's README](../README.md)&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
Up: [Index](README.md)&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
Next: [First Code Walk-Through](CodeWalkThrough.md)