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React 18 Design Patterns and Best Practices

React 18 Design Patterns and Best Practices

By : Carlos Santana Roldán
4.5 (19)
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React 18 Design Patterns and Best Practices

React 18 Design Patterns and Best Practices

4.5 (19)
By: Carlos Santana Roldán

Overview of this book

React helps you work smarter, not harder — but to reap the benefits of this popular JavaScript library and its components, you need a straightforward guide that will teach you how to make the most of it. React 18 Design Patterns and Best Practices will help you use React effectively to make your applications more flexible, easier to maintain, and improve their performance, while giving your workflow a huge boost. With a better organization of topics and knowledge about best practices added to your developer toolbox, the updated fourth edition ensures an enhanced learning experience. The book is split into three parts; the first will teach you the fundamentals of React patterns, the second will dive into how React works, and the third will focus on real-world applications. All the code samples are updated to the latest version of React and you’ll also find plenty of new additions that explore React 18 and Node 19’s newest features, alongside MonoRepo Architecture and a dedicated chapter on TypeScript. By the end of this book, you'll be able to efficiently build and deploy real-world React web applications.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
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18
Other Books You May Enjoy
19
Index

MonoRepo Architecture

When we think about building apps, we usually talk about an app, a git repository, and a build output. However, this configuration of an application and a repository does not always reflect the real-world experience of developers. Often organizations will use a single repository with all the applications, components, and libraries that could be used in common development. These are called a monorepository or single repository, and they are starting to become very popular.

So, what makes a monorepository interesting for organizations? Why put all the code in one place? Why not have a single git repository where you have many small and separate repositories? If we keep all our code in one project.

By keeping all the code in one repository, you keep all dependencies up to date across the organization. This is probably the biggest benefit of a single repository. This way we will stop having to waste time updating all the dependencies of several different...

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