Karl Castillo
Posted on March 22, 2020
Using useState
and useReducer
are great but what if you want your state to be accessible through different components? Before, we would've used Redux but now we have React Context.
Context has three parts to it -- creation, provider and consumer.
createContext
We can create a Context using createContext
and it takes the initial value you want. This initial value is used when the context has no corresponding value passed to the provider.
const ThemeContext = createContext('light')
<Context.Provider>
The provider allows any descendants of this provider will have access to the current value of the context as well as any changes. The provider accepts a value prop where you can change the current value of the context.
<ThemeContext.Provider>
...
</ThemeContext.Provider>
<Context.Consumer>
The consumer is basically the component where you'll have access to the current value of the context. When using this, the children is a render function which receives the current value as an argument.
<ThemeContext.Consumer>
{value =>
...
}
</ThemeContext.Consumer>
useContext
An alternative way to get the value of a context is to use the hook useContext
.
const value = useContext(ThemeContext)
So how do we update the context's value? The context's value can be updated and kept either using useState
or useReducer
.
// App.js
const [currentTheme, setTheme] = useState('light')
const toggleTheme = () => {
setTheme(prevTheme => prevTheme === 'light' ? 'dark' : 'light')
}
const value = {
theme: currenTheme,
toggleTheme
}
<ThemeContext.Provider value={value}>
<Content />
<ThemeContext.Provider value={value}>
// Content.js
const { theme, toggleTheme } = useContext(ThemeContext)
toggleTheme()
Posted on March 22, 2020
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