Of course. But I wanted decoupled from my app state because I can reuse this principle for other apps that do not use React. It never actually happened until now but that's what I thought when I decided to use Redux: to keep things completely separated.
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That may be true, but what else? I need something non persistent to store some app state and I believe Redux is just that: a state container
You can put it with the rest of your app state, or send it through another context provider.
Of course. But I wanted decoupled from my app state because I can reuse this principle for other apps that do not use React. It never actually happened until now but that's what I thought when I decided to use Redux: to keep things completely separated.