Jonny's answer is correct (never mutate the state given to you!) but I wanted to add another point to it. If all your objects have IDs, it's generally a bad idea to keep the state shape nested.
This:
{
items: {
1: {
id: 1,
links: [{
id: 10001
}]
}
}
}
is a shape that is hard to update.
It doesn't have to be this way! You can instead store it like this:
{
items: {
1: {
id: 1,
links: [10001]
}
},
links: {
10001: {
id: 10001
}
}
}
This is much easier for update because there is just one canonical copy of any entity. If you need to let user “edit a link”, there is just one place where it needs to be updated—and it's completely independent of items
or anything other referring to links
.
To get your API responses into such a shape, you can use normalizr. Once your entities inside the server actions are normalized, you can write a simple reducer that merges them into the current state:
import merge from 'lodash/object/merge';
function entities(state = { items: {}, links: {} }, action) {
if (action.response && action.response.entities) {
return merge({}, state, action.response.entities);
}
return state;
}
Please see Redux real-world
example for a demo of such approach.
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