DEV Community

Cover image for How I Replaced 2000 Lines of Code with Just 300 in Redux Store — Without Breaking the App!
Ahmed Rakan
Ahmed Rakan

Posted on

1

How I Replaced 2000 Lines of Code with Just 300 in Redux Store — Without Breaking the App!

I've observed a common pattern among developers working with Redux stores: when faced with new, but slightly different requirements, they often create new features and re-write the generic boilerplate code, including reducers, thunks, actions, and middleware. This can lead to significant repetition across the codebase.

We can't fully blame developers for this, as standardization and team best practices are typically by team leads....

However, when APIs or microservices are standardized—where endpoints like delete, create, put, and fetch follow a predictable structure—it's possible to create higher-order functions that can dynamically generate Redux reducers and actions. This reduces redundancy and encourages a more scalable architecture. Here's an example of how this can be implemented:

https://gist.github.com/ARAldhafeeri/1ad10710bee110b9a88013984272fbbd

it's 200 lines of code, with an example usage here is what it does :

  1. Dynamic Redux Slice Creation: The function createEntitySlice generates a Redux slice for an entity (like reservations or users), allowing developers to easily create, read, update, and delete data for any entity with minimal boilerplate code.
  2. Customizable Parameters: The function accepts customizable parameters, such as entityName, endpoints, extraReducers, extraThunks, and extraActions, enabling flexibility for different entities and specific requirements.
  3. Base CRUD Thunks: It provides base asynchronous thunks for common operations like fetch, create, update, delete, and search, which interact with an API based on the provided endpoints. These thunks manage the necessary API calls and handle errors.
  4. Reducers for State Management: The slice includes reducers for managing the loading state, storing fetched data, handling errors, and performing actions like searching and resetting the state.
  5. Middleware Integration: The code integrates listener middleware to handle side effects like displaying success or error messages based on the result of CRUD operations. It also enhances middleware with the ability to customize the behavior of state changes, such as triggering additional actions when certain conditions are met.
  6. Optimized Code Reusability: By using this higher-order function approach, developers can avoid repetitive boilerplate code and create reusable, dynamic slices for different entities without manually writing out actions and reducers each time.
  7. Extendable and modular: The higher-order function produces the needed functionality from a redux store for a feature, also we can extend everything in it from reducers, to initial state, so when custom endpoint arrive that doesn't full into the generic bases we created, we can simply add it.

Best,

Ahmed,

Sentry blog image

How I fixed 20 seconds of lag for every user in just 20 minutes.

Our AI agent was running 10-20 seconds slower than it should, impacting both our own developers and our early adopters. See how I used Sentry Profiling to fix it in record time.

Read more

Top comments (0)

A Workflow Copilot. Tailored to You.

Pieces.app image

Our desktop app, with its intelligent copilot, streamlines coding by generating snippets, extracting code from screenshots, and accelerating problem-solving.

Read the docs

👋 Kindness is contagious

Explore a sea of insights with this enlightening post, highly esteemed within the nurturing DEV Community. Coders of all stripes are invited to participate and contribute to our shared knowledge.

Expressing gratitude with a simple "thank you" can make a big impact. Leave your thanks in the comments!

On DEV, exchanging ideas smooths our way and strengthens our community bonds. Found this useful? A quick note of thanks to the author can mean a lot.

Okay