Homepage (site/index.html): integration-v14 promoted, Writings section integrated with 33 pieces clustered by type (stories/essays/miscellany), Writings welcome lightbox, content frame at 98% opacity. Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2.6 KiB
2.6 KiB
title, impact, impactDescription, tags
| title | impact | impactDescription | tags |
|---|---|---|---|
| Decouple State Management from UI | MEDIUM | enables swapping state implementations without changing UI | composition, state, architecture |
Decouple State Management from UI
The provider component should be the only place that knows how state is managed. UI components consume the context interface—they don't know if state comes from useState, Zustand, or a server sync.
Incorrect (UI coupled to state implementation):
function ChannelComposer({ channelId }: { channelId: string }) {
// UI component knows about global state implementation
const state = useGlobalChannelState(channelId)
const { submit, updateInput } = useChannelSync(channelId)
return (
<Composer.Frame>
<Composer.Input
value={state.input}
onChange={(text) => sync.updateInput(text)}
/>
<Composer.Submit onPress={() => sync.submit()} />
</Composer.Frame>
)
}
Correct (state management isolated in provider):
// Provider handles all state management details
function ChannelProvider({
channelId,
children,
}: {
channelId: string
children: React.ReactNode
}) {
const { state, update, submit } = useGlobalChannel(channelId)
const inputRef = useRef(null)
return (
<Composer.Provider
state={state}
actions={{ update, submit }}
meta={{ inputRef }}
>
{children}
</Composer.Provider>
)
}
// UI component only knows about the context interface
function ChannelComposer() {
return (
<Composer.Frame>
<Composer.Header />
<Composer.Input />
<Composer.Footer>
<Composer.Submit />
</Composer.Footer>
</Composer.Frame>
)
}
// Usage
function Channel({ channelId }: { channelId: string }) {
return (
<ChannelProvider channelId={channelId}>
<ChannelComposer />
</ChannelProvider>
)
}
Different providers, same UI:
// Local state for ephemeral forms
function ForwardMessageProvider({ children }) {
const [state, setState] = useState(initialState)
const forwardMessage = useForwardMessage()
return (
<Composer.Provider
state={state}
actions={{ update: setState, submit: forwardMessage }}
>
{children}
</Composer.Provider>
)
}
// Global synced state for channels
function ChannelProvider({ channelId, children }) {
const { state, update, submit } = useGlobalChannel(channelId)
return (
<Composer.Provider state={state} actions={{ update, submit }}>
{children}
</Composer.Provider>
)
}
The same Composer.Input component works with both providers because it only
depends on the context interface, not the implementation.