High level utils for redux-saga. These utils are based on the native redux-saga effects.
Via Yarn (recommended):
yarn add redux-saga-utils
Via NPM:
npm install redux-saga-utils --save
takeLatestParametric(pattern, actionCompare, saga, ...args)
It works like takeLatest, but it checks action object before forking handler saga. Useful when you have actions with the same action type, but with different properties inside the action object to distinguish particular action scope. It's common approach in the redux world that helps to make redux apps reusable, e.g. redux-form uses that.
Signature is a bit different from takeLatest: actionCompare
parameter is added. It's part of action object to compare with.
Imagine these action creators in the redux app:
const actionConst = 'EXAMPLE_ACTION';
const actionScopeOne = payload => ({
type: actionConst,
scope: 'scopeOne',
payload,
});
const actionScopeTwo = payload => ({
type: actionConst,
scope: 'scopeTwo',
payload,
});
Then you can catch only actions with particular scope properties in the sagas:
import { takeLatestParametric } from 'redux-saga-utils';
const worker = function* worker(action) {
// ...
};
const saga = function* saga() {
yield takeLatestParametric(actionConst, { scope: 'scopeOne' }, worker),
};
awaitTransitiveActions(actions, awaitActions)
actions
— array of actions. awaitActions
— array of action constants.
Useful when you want to wait for actions which will be produced by another actions. Such a case can occur in sagas that are waiting for page initialization, etc.
Imagine that you've these action creators:
const actionA = () => ({
type: 'ACTION_A',
});
const actionB = () => ({
type: 'ACTION_B',
});
const actionC = () => ({
type: 'ACTION_C',
});
const actionD = () => ({
type: 'ACTION_D',
});
const actionE = () => ({
type: 'ACTION_E',
});
And a couple of sagas:
const sagaABC = function* sagaABC() {
yield take('ACTION_A');
// Do some I/O here.
yield put(actionB());
yield put(actionC());
};
const sagaDE = function* sagaDE() {
yield take('ACTION_D');
yield put(actionE());
};
Your ACTION_A
will trigger ACTION_B
and ACTION_C
after I/O, as well as ACTION_D
will trigger ACTION_E
, but before you can say knife.
You can easily wait for all that stuff:
import { awaitTransitiveActions } from 'redux-saga-utils';
const saga = function* saga() {
yield awaitTransitiveActions([
actionA(),
actionD(),
], [
'ACTION_E',
'ACTION_C',
'ACTION_B',
]);
// ...
};