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That would be one way yes.
The idea is that if you need a state object and the React way is a problem you can move it to a model. I would not recommend it for something simple like your examples of course, just stating that this possibility exists.
That sounds like a spot-on idea.
I recently created a small web page and used MirrorJS (uses Redux underneath) to keep all states in one place.
setState wasn't needed in most of places and all the states were managed in one place.
setState
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That would be one way yes.
The idea is that if you need a state object and the React way is a problem you can move it to a model. I would not recommend it for something simple like your examples of course, just stating that this possibility exists.
That sounds like a spot-on idea.
I recently created a small web page and used MirrorJS (uses Redux underneath) to keep all states in one place.
setState
wasn't needed in most of places and all the states were managed in one place.