9.4 KiB
Coeffects
This tutorial explains coeffects
.
It explains what they are, how they can be "injected", and how to manage them in tests.
Table Of Contexts
- What Are They?
- An Example
- How We Want It
- Abracadabra
- Which Interceptors?
inject-cofx
- More
inject-cofx
- Meet
reg-cofx
- Example Of
reg-cofx
- Another Example Of
reg-cofx
- Secret Interceptors
- Testing
- The 5 Point Summary
Coeffects
What Are They?
coeffects
are the data resources that an event handler needs
to perform its computation.
Because the majority of event handlers only need db
and
event
, there's a specific registration function, called reg-event-db
,
which delivers these two coeffects as arguments to an event
handler, making this common case easy to program.
But sometimes an event handler needs other data inputs to perform its computation. Things like a random number, or a GUID, or the current datetime. Perhaps it needs access to a DataScript connection.
An Example
This handler obtains data directly from LocalStore:
(reg-event-db
:load-defaults
(fn [db _]
(let [val (js->clj (.getItem js/localStorage "defaults-key"))] ;; <-- Problem
(assoc db :defaults val))))
This works, but there's a cost.
Because it has directly accessed LocalStore, this event handler is not pure, and impure functions cause well-documented paper cuts.
How We Want It
Our goal in this tutorial will be to rewrite this event handler so that it only uses data from arguments. This will take a few steps.
The first is that we first switch to
using reg-event-fx
(instead of reg-event-db
).
Event handlers registered via reg-event-fx
are slightly
different to those registered via reg-event-db
. -fx
handlers
get two arguments, but the first is not db
. Instead it
is an argument which we will call cofx
(that's a nice distinct
name which will aid communication).
Previous tutorials showed there's a :db
key in cofx
. We
now want cofx
to have other keys and values, like this:
(reg-event-fx ;; note: -fx
:load-defaults
(fn [cofx event] ;; cofx means coeffects
(let [val (:local-store cofx) ;; <-- get data from cofx
db (:db cofx)] ;; <-- more data from cofx
{:db (assoc db :defaults val))})) ;; returns an effect
Notice how cofx
magically contains a :local-store
key with the
right value. Nice! But how do we make this magic happen?
Abracadabra
Each time an event handler is executed, a brand new context
is created, and within that context
is a brand new :coeffect
map, which is initially totally empty.
That pristine context
value (containing a pristine :coeffect
map) is threaded
through a chain of Interceptors before it finally reaches our event handler,
sitting on the end of a chain, itself wrapped up in an interceptor. We know
this story well from a previous tutorial.
So, all members of the Interceptor chain have the opportunity to add to :coeffects
via their :before
function. This is where :coeffect
magic happens. This is how
new keys can be added to :coeffect
, so that later our event handler magically finds the
right data (like :local-store
) in its cofx
argument. It is the Interceptors.
Which Interceptors?
If Interceptors put data in :coeffect
, then we'll need to add the right ones
when we register our event handler.
Something like this (this handler is the same as before, except for one detail):
(reg-event-fx
:load-defaults
[ (inject-cofx :local-store "defaults-key") ] ;; <-- this is new
(fn [cofx event]
(let [val (:local-store cofx)
db (:db cofx)]
{:db (assoc db :defaults val))}))
Look at that - my event handler has a new Interceptor! It is injecting the
right key/value pair (:local-store
)
into context's
:coeffeects
, which itself then goes on to be the first argument
to our event handler (cofx
).
inject-cofx
inject-cofx
is part of the re-frame API.
It is a function which returns an Interceptor whose :before
function loads
a key/value pair into a context's
:coeffect
map.
inject-cofx
takes either one or two arguments. The first is always the id
of the coeffect
required (called a cofx-id
). The 2nd is an optional addition value.
So, in the case above, the cofx-id
was :local-store
and the additional value
was "defaults-key" which was presumably the LocalStore key.
More inject-cofx
Here's some other usage examples:
(inject-cofx :random-int 10)
(inject-cofx :guid)
(inject-cofx :now)
I could create an event handler which has access to 3 coeffects:
(reg-event-fx
:some-id
[(inject-cofx :random-int 10) (inject-cofx :now) (inject-cofx :local-store "blah")] ;; 3
(fn [cofx _]
... in here I can access cofx's keys :now :local-store and :random-int))
But that's probably just greedy, and not very useful.
And so, to the final piece in the puzzle: how does inject-cofx
know what to do when it is given :now
or :local-store
?
Each cofx-id
requires a different action.
Meet reg-cofx
This function is also part of the re-frame API.
It allows you to associate a cofx-id
(like :now
or :local-store
) with a
handler function that injects the right key/value pair.
The function you register will be passed two arguments:
- a
:coeffects
map (to which it should add a key/value pair), and - optionally, the additional value supplied to
inject-cofx
and it is expected to return a modified:coeffects
map.
Example Of reg-cofx
Above, we wrote an event handler that wanted :now
data to be available. Here
is how a handler could be registered for :now
:
(reg-cofx ;; registration function
:now ;; what cofx-id are we registering
(fn [coeffects _] ;; second parameter not used in this case
(assoc coeffects :now (js.Date.)))) ;; add :now key, with value
The outcome is:
- because that cofx handler above is now registered for
:now
, I can - add an Interceptor to an event handler which
- looks like
(inject-cofx :now)
- which means within that event handler I can access a
:now
value fromcofx
As a result, my event handler is pure.
Another Example Of reg-cofx
This:
(reg-cofx ;; new registration function
:local-store
(fn [coeffects local-store-key]
(assoc coeffects
:local-store
(js->clj (.getItem js/localStorage local-store-key)))))
With these two registrations in place, I could now use both (inject-cofx :now)
and
(inject-cofx :local-store "blah")
in an event handler's interceptor chain.
To put this another way: I can't use (inject-cofx :blah)
UNLESS I have previously
used reg-cofx
to register a handler for :blah
. Otherwise inject-cofx
doesn't
know how to inject a :blah
.
Secret Interceptors
In a previous tutorial we learned that reg-events-db
and reg-events-fx
add Interceptors to front of any chain
during registration. We found they inserted an Interceptor called do-fx
.
I can now reveal that
they also add (inject-cofx :db)
at the front of each chain.
Guess what that injects into the :coeffects
of every event handler? This is how :db
is always available to event handlers.
Okay, so that was the last surprise. Now you know everything.
If ever you wanted to use DataScript, instead of an atom-containing-a-map
like app-db
, you'd replace reg-event-db
and reg-event-fx
with your own
registration functions and have them auto insert the DataScript connection.
Testing
During testing, you may want to stub out certain coeffects.
You may, for example, want to test that an event handler works
using a specific now
, not a true random number.
In your test, you'd mock out the cofx handler:
(reg-cofx
:now
(fn [coeffects _]
(assoc coeffects :now (js/Date. 2016 1 1))) ;; now was then
If your test does alter registered coeffect handlers, and you are using cljs.test
,
then you can use a fixture
to restore all coeffects at the end of your test:
(defn fixture-re-frame
[]
(let [restore-re-frame (atom nil)]
{:before #(reset! restore-re-frame (re-frame.core/make-restore-fn))
:after #(@restore-re-frame)}))
(use-fixtures :each (fixture-re-frame))
re-frame.core/make-restore-fn
creates a checkpoint for re-frame state (including
registered handlers) to which you can return.
The 5 Point Summary
In note form:
- Event handlers should only source data from their arguments
- We want to "inject" required data into the first, cofx argument
- We use the
(inject-cofx :key)
interceptor in registration of the event handler - It will look up the registered cofx handler for that
:key
to do the injection - We must have previously registered a cofx handler via
reg-cofx
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