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  • Hands-On Design Patterns with React Native
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Hands-On Design Patterns with React Native

Hands-On Design Patterns with React Native

By : Grzesiukiewicz
3.5 (2)
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Hands-On Design Patterns with React Native

Hands-On Design Patterns with React Native

3.5 (2)
By: Grzesiukiewicz

Overview of this book

React Native helps developers reuse code across different mobile platforms like iOS and Android. This book will show you effective design patterns in the React Native world and will make you ready for professional development in big teams. The book will focus only on the patterns that are relevant to JavaScript, ECMAScript, React and React Native. However, you can successfully transfer a lot of the skills and techniques to other languages. I call them “Idea patterns”. This book will start with the most standard development patterns in React like component building patterns, styling patterns in React Native and then extend these patterns to your mobile application using real world practical examples. Each chapter comes with full, separate source code of applications that you can build and run on your phone. The book is also diving into architectural patterns. Especially how to adapt MVC to React environment. You will learn Flux architecture and how Redux is implementing it. Each approach will be presented with its pros and cons. You will learn how to work with external data sources using libraries like Redux thunk and Redux Saga. The end goal is the ability to recognize the best solution for a given problem for your next mobile application.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
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Creating an alternative with MobX

It would be foolish to rely on Redux with no strong alternative. One of such alternatives is MobX, a state management library that is not so opinionated on mutations. MobX comes with as little boilerplate as possible. This is huge compared to Redux, which, being very explicit, requires a lot of boilerplate.

Here I must stop to remind you that the React ecosystem leans towards explicitness, that is, building apps without too many hidden mechanisms. You control the flow and you see all of the bits that are required for the app to go the full cycle of Flux. It's n surprise, then, that mainstream developers prefer Redux. An interesting fact is that Facebook Open Source is backing the MobX project.

MobX, being more implicit, can hide away some logic built around Observables and provide neat annotations to quickly enhance your stateful components...

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