Introducing Subspace React's components
A new set of components were created to simplify the usage of Subspace within React projects. Learn more about them here https://subspace.embarklabs.io/react.html
Install
You can install it through npm
or yarn
:
npm install --save @embarklabs/subspace-react web3 rxjs
Usage
SubspaceProvider
To use most of the subspace-react
components, you need to wrap your app with the <SubspaceProvider web3={web3} />
component. This will make Subspace available to any nested components that accesses it via the useSubspace
hook or has been wrapped in the withSubspace
higher order component. Any React component might use Subspace so it makes sense to add the provider near the top level of your dApp. The SubspaceProvider
requires a web3 object
// index.js
import React from 'react'
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom'
import MyApp from './MyApp'
import { SubspaceProvider } from '@embarklabs/subspace-react';
const web3 = new Web3("ws://localhost:8545");
const rootElement = document.getElementById('root')
ReactDOM.render(
<SubspaceProvider web3={web3}>
<MyApp />
</SubspaceProvider>,
rootElement
);
useSubspace
Rather than relying on global variables or passing Subspace through props, The easiest way to access Subspace features is via the useSubspace
hook. Be sure that your entire dApp is wrapped with a <SubspaceProvider />
to have it available througout the component tree.
// index.js
import React from 'react'
import { useSubspace } from '@embarklabs/subspace-react';
const MyComponent = () => {
const subspace = useSubspace();
// do something....
// subspace.trackBalance(web3.eth.defaultAccount);
return ...;
}
export default MyComponent
withSubspace
This higher order component is provided as an alternative to the useSubspace
hook. This injects the subspace
property with an already initialized Subspace instance. Just like with the hook, your entire dApp needs to be wrapped with a <SubspaceProvider />
.
// index.js
import React from 'react'
import { withSubspace } from '@embarklabs/subspace-react';
const MyComponent = (props) => {
// do something....
// props.subspace.trackBalance(web3.eth.defaultAccount);
return ...;
}
export default withSubspace(MyComponent);
observe
Useful to make your component subscribe to any observable props it receives when the component is mounted and automatically unsubscribes when the component is unmounted. It can be used with any kind of observables. This component already existed in the previous version of Subspace. The only difference is that it has been moved to the subspace-react
package.
import { observe } from '@embarklabs/subspace-react';
const ObserverComponent = observe(WrappedComponent);
Example usage:
const MyComponent = ({eventData}) => {
// Handle initial state when no data is available
if (!eventData) {
return <p>No data</p>;
}
return <p>Value: {eventData.someReturnValue}</p>
};
const MyEnhancedComponent = observe(MyComponent);
const SomeOtherComponent = () => {
const myObservable$ = MyContractInstance.events.MyEvent.track({fromBlock: 1});
return <MyEnhancedComponent myProp={myObservable$} />;
}
Breaking changes
- Peer dependencies
Installing subspace requires explicitly installingweb3
andrxjs
as peer depenencies, while before they were installed as dependencies of the package
npm install --save @embarklabs/subspace web3 rxjs
- Web3
In the previous version, Subspace received a web3.js provider in the constructor. This new version receives instead aWeb3
object:
const web3 = new Web3("http://localhost:8545");
const subspace = new Subspace(web3);
init()
isasync
.
This means that you need to wait until Subspace has been initialized to use its features:
await subspace.init();
-
The
observe
higher-order component was moved from the@embarklabs/subspace
package to the new@embarklabs/subspace-react
package. -
If no call interval is specified in the Subspace options, it will use the average blocktime as the interval of time to poll the contract addresses for changes in state or balance.
Maintenance / Bug fixes
- Major refactor increasing the usage of observables within the subspace package: Subjects in tracking functions were replaced by observables (they still keep the same functionality), New blocks and interval timers are done via observables.
- Subscriptions to web3js are handled automatically depending on the number of subscribers. The subscriptions are kept if there is at least one observer subscribed to an observable, otherwise the subscription is closed and will be reopened once there's a new subscriber.
- The checksum of the address to be tracked is performed automatically when performing balance tracking
- Dropped the usage of
web3-utils
. - Simplified the logic for tracking events
- Added Lerna to the repository to organize the different packages, as well as making the documentation part of the project
- Updated all the examples to use the latest subspace-react components