Redux Toolkit Quick Start
What You'll Learn
- How to set up and use Redux Toolkit with React-Redux
Prerequisites
- Familiarity with ES6 syntax and features
- Knowledge of React terminology: JSX, State, Function Components, Props, and Hooks
- Understanding of Redux terms and concepts
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IntroductionWelcome to the Redux Toolkit Quick Start tutorial! This tutorial will briefly introduce you to Redux Toolkit and teach you how to start using it correctly.
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How to Read This TutorialThis page will focus on just how to set up a Redux application with Redux Toolkit and the main APIs you'll use. For explanations of what Redux is, how it works, and full examples of how to use Redux Toolkit, see the tutorials linked in the "Tutorials Index" page.
For this tutorial, we assume that you're using Redux Toolkit with React, but you can also use it with other UI layers as well. The examples are based on a typical Create-React-App folder structure where all the application code is in a src
, but the patterns can be adapted to whatever project or folder setup you're using.
The Redux+JS template for Create-React-App comes with this same project setup already configured.
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Usage Summary#
Install Redux Toolkit and React-ReduxAdd the Redux Toolkit and React-Redux packages to your project:
npm install @reduxjs/toolkit react-redux
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Create a Redux StoreCreate a file named src/app/store.js
. Import the configureStore
API from Redux Toolkit. We'll start by creating an empty Redux store, and exporting it:
import { configureStore } from '@reduxjs/toolkit'
export default configureStore({ reducer: {}})
This creates a Redux store, and also automatically configure the Redux DevTools extension so that you can inspect the store while developing.
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Provide the Redux Store to ReactOnce the store is created, we can make it available to our React components by putting a React-Redux <Provider>
around our application in src/index.js
. Import the Redux store we just created, put a <Provider>
around your <App>
, and pass the store as a prop:
import React from 'react'import ReactDOM from 'react-dom'import './index.css'import App from './App'import store from './app/store'import { Provider } from 'react-redux'
ReactDOM.render( <Provider store={store}> <App /> </Provider>, document.getElementById('root'))
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Create a Redux State SliceAdd a new file named src/features/counter/counterSlice.js
. In that file, import the createSlice
API from Redux Toolkit.
Creating a slice requires a string name to identify the slice, an initial state value, and one or more reducer functions to define how the state can be updated. Once a slice is created, we can export the generated Redux action creators and the reducer function for the whole slice.
Redux requires that we write all state updates immutably, by making copies of data and updating the copies. However, Redux Toolkit's createSlice
and createReducer
APIs use Immer inside to allow us to write "mutating" update logic that becomes correct immutable updates.
import { createSlice } from '@reduxjs/toolkit'
export const counterSlice = createSlice({ name: 'counter', initialState: { value: 0 }, reducers: { increment: state => { // Redux Toolkit allows us to write "mutating" logic in reducers. It // doesn't actually mutate the state because it uses the Immer library, // which detects changes to a "draft state" and produces a brand new // immutable state based off those changes state.value += 1 }, decrement: state => { state.value -= 1 }, incrementByAmount: (state, action) => { state.value += action.payload } }})
// Action creators are generated for each case reducer functionexport const { increment, decrement, incrementByAmount } = counterSlice.actions
export default counterSlice.reducer
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Add Slice Reducers to the StoreNext, we need to import the reducer function from the counter slice and add it to our store. By defining a field inside the reducer
parameter, we tell the store to use this slice reducer function to handle all updates to that state.
import { configureStore } from '@reduxjs/toolkit'import counterReducer from '../features/counter/counterSlice'
export default configureStore({ reducer: { counter: counterReducer }})
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Use Redux State and Actions in React ComponentsNow we can use the React-Redux hooks to let React components interact with the Redux store. We can read data from the store with useSelector
, and dispatch actions using useDispatch
. Create a src/features/counter/Counter.js
file with a <Counter>
component inside, then import that component into App.js
and render it inside of <App>
.
import React from 'react'import { useSelector, useDispatch } from 'react-redux'import { decrement, increment } from './counterSlice'import styles from './Counter.module.css'
export function Counter() { const count = useSelector(state => state.counter.value) const dispatch = useDispatch()
return ( <div> <div> <button aria-label="Increment value" onClick={() => dispatch(increment())} > Increment </button> <span>{count}</span> <button aria-label="Decrement value" onClick={() => dispatch(decrement())} > Decrement </button> </div> </div> )}
Now, any time you click the "Increment" and "Decrement buttons:
- The corresponding Redux action will be dispatched to the store
- The counter slice reducer will see the actions and update its state
- The
<Counter>
component will see the new state value from the store and re-render itself with the new data
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What You've LearnedThat was a brief overview of how to set up and use Redux Toolkit with React. Recapping the details:
Summary
- Create a Redux store with
configureStore
configureStore
accepts areducer
function as a named argumentconfigureStore
automatically sets up the store with good default settings
- Provide the Redux store to the React application components
- Put a React-Redux
<Provider>
component around your<App />
- Pass the Redux store as
<Provider store={store}>
- Put a React-Redux
- Create a Redux "slice" reducer with
createSlice
- Call
createSlice
with a string name, an initial state, and named reducer functions - Reducer functions may "mutate" the state using Immer
- Export the generated slice reducer and action creators
- Call
- Use the React-Redux
useSelector/useDispatch
hooks in React components- Read data from the store with the
useSelector
hook - Get the
dispatch
function with theuseDispatch
hook, and dispatch actions as needed
- Read data from the store with the
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Full Counter App ExampleHere's the complete counter application as a running CodeSandbox:
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What's Next?We recommend going through the "Redux Essentials" and "Redux Fundamentals" tutorials in the Redux core docs, which will give you a complete understanding of how Redux works, what Redux Toolkit does, and how to use it correctly.