## Initial Code Walk-through At this point, you are about 55% of the way to understanding re-frame. You have: - an overview of the 6 domino process [from this repo's README](../README.md) - an understanding of app state ([from the previous tutorial](ApplicationState.md)) In this tutorial, **we look at re-frame code**. By the end of it, you'll be at 70% knowledge, and ready to start coding an app. ## What Code? This repo contains an `/examples` application called ["simple"](https://github.com/Day8/re-frame/tree/develop/examples/simple), which contains 70 lines of code. We'll look at every line of [the file](https://github.com/Day8/re-frame/blob/develop/examples/simple/src/simple/core.cljs). This app: - displays the current time in a nice big, colourful font - provides a single text input field, into which you can type a hex colour code, like "#CCC", used for the time display When it is running, here's what it looks like:  To run the code yourself: * Install Java 8 * Install leiningen (http://leiningen.org/#install) Then: 1. `git clone https://github.com/Day8/re-frame.git` 2. `cd re-frame/examples/simple` 3. `lein do clean, figwheel` 4. wait a minute and then open `http://localhost:3449/example.html` So, what's just happened? The ClojureScript code under `/src` has been compiled into `javascript` and put into `/resources/public/js/client.js` which is loaded into `/resources/public/example.html` (the HTML you just opened) Figwheel provides for hot-loading, so you can edit the source code (under `/src`)and watch the loaded HTML change. ## Namespace Because this example is tiny, the source code is in a single namespace: https://github.com/Day8/re-frame/blob/master/examples/simple/src/simple/core.cljs Within this namespace, we'll need access to both `reagent` and `re-frame`. So, at the top, we start like this: ```clj (ns simple.core (:require [reagent.core :as reagent] [re-frame.core :as rf])) ``` ## Data Schema Now, normally, I'd strongly recommended that you write a quality schema for your application state (the data stored in `app-db`). But, here, to minimise cognitive load, we'll cut that corner. But ... we can't cut it completely. You'll still need an informal description, and here it is ... for this app `app-db` will contain a two-key map like this: ```cljs {:time (js/Date.) ;; current time for display :time-color "#f88"} ;; the colour in which the time should be be shown ``` re-frame itself owns/manages `app-db` (see FAQ #1), and it will supply the value within it (the two-key map described above) to your various handlers as required. ## Events (domino 1) Events are data. re-frame uses a vector format for events. For example: ```clj [:delete-item 42] ``` The first element in the vector is a keyword which identifies the `kind` of `event`. The further elements are optional, and can provide additional data associated with the event. The additional value above, `42`, is presumably the id of the item to delete. Here are some other example events: ```clj [:admit-to-being-satoshi false] [:dressing/put-pants-on "velour flares" {:method :left-leg-first :belt false}] ``` (For non-trivial applications, the `kind` keyword will be namespaced.) **Rule**: events are pure data. No sneaky tricks like putting callback functions on the wire. You know who you are. ### dispatch To send an event, call `dispatch` with the event vector as argument: ```clj (rf/dispatch [:event-id value1 value2]) ``` In this "simple" app, a `:timer` event is dispatched every second: ```clj (defn dispatch-timer-event [] (let [now (js/Date.)] (rf/dispatch [:timer now]))) ;; <-- dispatch used ;; call the dispatching function every second (defonce do-timer (js/setInterval dispatch-timer-event 1000)) ``` This is an unusual source of events. Normally, it is an app's UI widgets which `dispatch` events (in response to user actions), or an HTTP POST's `on-success` handler, or a websocket which gets a new packet. ### After dispatch `dispatch` puts an event into a queue for processing. So, **an event is not processed synchronously, like a function call**. The processing happens **later** - asynchronously. Very soon, but not now. The consumer of the queue is a `router` which looks after the event's processing. The `router`: 1. inspects the 1st element of an event vector 2. looks for the event handler (function) which is **registered** for this kind of event 3. calls that event handler with the necessary arguments As a re-frame app developer, your job, then, is to write and register an event handler (function) for each kind of event. ## Event Handlers (domino 2) Collectively, event handlers provide the control logic in a re-frame application. In this application, 3 kinds of event are dispatched: `:initialize` `:time-color-change` `:timer` 3 events means we'll be registering 3 event handlers. ### Two ways to register Event handler functions take two arguments `coeffects` and `event`, and they return `effects`. Conceptually, you can think of `coeffects` as being "the current state of the world". And you can think of event handlers has computing and returning changes (effects) based on "the current state of the world" and the arriving event. Event handlers can be registered via either `reg-event-fx` or `reg-event-db` (`-fx` vs `-db`): - `reg-event-fx` can take multiple `coeffects` and can return multiple `effects`, while - `reg-event-db` allows you to write simpler handlers for the common case where you want them to take only one `coeffect` - the current app state - and return one `effect` - the updated app state. Because of its simplicity, we'll be using the latter here: `reg-event-db`. ### reg-event-db We register event handlers using re-frame's `reg-event-db`: ```clj (rf/reg-event-db :the-event-id the-event-handler-fn) ``` The handler function you provide should expect two arguments: - `db`, the current application state (the value contained in `app-db`) - `v`, the event vector (what was given to `dispatch`) So, your function will have a signature like this: `(fn [db v] ...)`. Each event handler must compute and return the new state of the application, which means it returns a modified version of `db` (or an unmodified one, if there are to be no changes to the state). ### :initialize On startup, application state must be initialized. We want to put a sensible value into `app-db`, which starts out containing `{}`. So a `(dispatch [:initialize])` will happen early in the app's life (more on this below), and we need to write an `event handler` for it. Now this event handler is slightly unusual because not only does it not care about any event information passed in via the `event` vector, but it doesn't even care about the existing value in `db` - it just wants to plonk a completely new value: ```clj (rf/reg-event-db ;; sets up initial application state :initialize (fn [_ _] ;; the two parameters are not important here, so use _ {:time (js/Date.) ;; What it returns becomes the new application state :time-color "#f88"})) ;; so the application state will initially be a map with two keys ``` This particular handler `fn` ignores the two parameters (usually called `db` and `v`) and simply returns a map literal, which becomes the application state. For comparison, here's how we would have written this if we'd cared about the existing value of `db`: ```clj (rf/reg-event-db :initialize (fn [db _] ;; we use db this time, so name it (-> db (assoc :time (js/Date.)) (assoc :time-color "#f88"))) ``` ### :timer Earlier, we set up a timer function to `(dispatch [:timer now])` every second. Here's how we handle it: ```clj (rf/reg-event-db ;; usage: (rf/dispatch [:timer a-js-Date]) :timer (fn [db [_ new-time]] ;; <-- de-structure the event vector (assoc db :time new-time))) ;; compute and return the new application state ``` Notes: 1. the `event` will be like `[:timer a-time]`, so the 2nd `v` parameter destructures to extract the `a-time` value 2. the handler computes a new application state from `db`, and returns it ### :time-color-change When the user enters a new colour value (via an input text box): ```clj (rf/reg-event-db :time-color-change ;; usage: (rf/dispatch [:time-color-change 34562]) (fn [db [_ new-color-value]] (assoc db :time-color new-color-value))) ;; compute and return the new application state ``` ## Effect Handlers (domino 3) Domino 3 realises/puts into action the `effects` returned by event handlers. In this "simple" application, our event handlers are implicitly returning only one effect: "update application state". This particular `effect` is accomplished by a re-frame-supplied `effect` handler. **So, there's nothing for us to do for this domino**. We are using a standard re-frame effect handler. And this is not unusual. You'll seldom have to write `effect` handlers, but in a later tutorial we'll show you more about how to do so when you need to. ## Subscription Handlers (domino 4) Subscription handlers, or `query` functions, take application state as an argument and run a query over it, returning something called a "materialised view" of that application state. When the application state changes, subscription functions are re-run by re-frame, to compute new values (new materialised views). Ultimately, the data returned by `query` functions is used in the `view` functions (Domino 5). One subscription can source data from other subscriptions. So it is possible to create a tree of dependencies. The Views (Domino 5) are the leaves of this tree. The tree's root is `app-db` and the intermediate nodes between the two are computations being performed by the query functions of Domino 4. Now, the two examples below are trivial. They just extract part of the application state and return it. So, there's virtually no computation. A more interesting tree of subscriptions, and more explanation, can be found in the todomvc example. ### reg-sub `reg-sub` associates a `query id` with a function that computes that query, like this: ```clj (rf/reg-sub :some-query-id ;; query id (used later in subscribe) a-query-fn) ;; the function which will compute the query ``` Then later, a view function (domino 5) subscribes to a query like this: `(subscribe [:some-query-id])`, and `a-query-fn` will be used to perform the query over the application state. Each time application state changes, `a-query-fn` will be called again to compute a new materialised view (a new computation over app state) and that new value will be given to all `view` functions which are subscribed to `:some-query-id`. These `view` functions will then be called to compute the new DOM state (because the views depend on query results which have changed). Along this reactive chain of dependencies, re-frame will ensure the necessary calls are made, at the right time. Here's the code: ```clj (rf/reg-sub :time (fn [db _] ;; db is current app state. 2nd unused param is query vector (:time db))) ;; return a query computation over the application state (rf/reg-sub :time-color (fn [db _] (:time-color db))) ``` Like I said, both of these queries are trivial. See [todomvc.subs.clj](https://github.com/Day8/re-frame/blob/master/examples/todomvc/src/todomvc/subs.cljs) for more interesting ones. ## View Functions (domino 5) `view` functions turn data into DOM. They are "State in, Hiccup out" and they are Reagent components. An SPA will have lots of `view` functions, and collectively, they render the app's entire UI. ### Hiccup `Hiccup` is a data format for representing HTML. Here's a trivial view function which returns hiccup-formatted data: ```clj (defn greet [] [:div "Hello viewers"]) ;; means