What is mapDispatchToProps?

ReactjsReduxReact ReduxMapdispatchtoprops

Reactjs Problem Overview


I was reading the documentation for the Redux library and it has this example:

> In addition to reading the state, container components can dispatch actions. In a similar fashion, you can define a function called mapDispatchToProps() that receives the dispatch() method and returns callback props that you want to inject into the presentational component.

This actually makes no sense. Why do you need mapDispatchToProps when you already have mapStateToProps?

They also provide this handy code sample:

const mapDispatchToProps = (dispatch) => {
  return {
    onTodoClick: (id) => {
      dispatch(toggleTodo(id))
    }
  }
}

What is this function and why it is useful?

Reactjs Solutions


Solution 1 - Reactjs

I feel like none of the answers have crystallized why mapDispatchToProps is useful.

This can really only be answered in the context of the container-component pattern, which I found best understood by first reading:Container Components then Usage with React.

In a nutshell, your components are supposed to be concerned only with displaying stuff. The only place they are supposed to get information from is their props.

Separated from "displaying stuff" (components) is:

  • how you get the stuff to display,
  • and how you handle events.

That is what containers are for.

Therefore, a "well designed" component in the pattern look like this:

class FancyAlerter extends Component {
    sendAlert = () => {
        this.props.sendTheAlert()
    }

    render() {
        <div>
          <h1>Today's Fancy Alert is {this.props.fancyInfo}</h1>
          <Button onClick={sendAlert}/>
        </div>
     }
}

See how this component gets the info it displays from props (which came from the redux store via mapStateToProps) and it also gets its action function from its props: sendTheAlert().

That's where mapDispatchToProps comes in: in the corresponding container

// FancyButtonContainer.js

function mapDispatchToProps(dispatch) {
    return({
        sendTheAlert: () => {dispatch(ALERT_ACTION)}
    })
}

function mapStateToProps(state) {
    return({fancyInfo: "Fancy this:" + state.currentFunnyString})
}

export const FancyButtonContainer = connect(
    mapStateToProps, mapDispatchToProps)(
    FancyAlerter
)

I wonder if you can see, now that it's the container 1 that knows about redux and dispatch and store and state and ... stuff.

The component in the pattern, FancyAlerter, which does the rendering doesn't need to know about any of that stuff: it gets its method to call at onClick of the button, via its props.

And ... mapDispatchToProps was the useful means that redux provides to let the container easily pass that function into the wrapped component on its props.

All this looks very like the todo example in docs, and another answer here, but I have tried to cast it in the light of the pattern to emphasize why.

(Note: you can't use mapStateToProps for the same purpose as mapDispatchToProps for the basic reason that you don't have access to dispatch inside mapStateToProp. So you couldn't use mapStateToProps to give the wrapped component a method that uses dispatch.

I don't know why they chose to break it into two mapping functions - it might have been tidier to have mapToProps(state, dispatch, props) IE one function to do both!


1 Note that I deliberately explicitly named the container FancyButtonContainer, to highlight that it is a "thing" - the identity (and hence existence!) of the container as "a thing" is sometimes lost in the shorthand

export default connect(...) ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀

syntax that is shown in most examples

Solution 2 - Reactjs

It's basically a shorthand. So instead of having to write:

this.props.dispatch(toggleTodo(id));

You would use mapDispatchToProps as shown in your example code, and then elsewhere write:

this.props.onTodoClick(id);

or more likely in this case, you'd have that as the event handler:

<MyComponent onClick={this.props.onTodoClick} />

There's a helpful video by Dan Abramov on this here: Redux: Generating Containers with connect() from React Redux (VisibleTodoList)

Solution 3 - Reactjs

mapStateToProps() is a utility which helps your component get updated state(which is updated by some other components),
mapDispatchToProps() is a utility which will help your component to fire an action event (dispatching action which may cause change of application state)

Solution 4 - Reactjs

mapStateToProps, mapDispatchToProps and connect from react-redux library provides a convenient way to access your state and dispatch function of your store. So basically connect is a higher order component, you can also think as a wrapper if this make sense for you. So every time your state is changed mapStateToProps will be called with your new state and subsequently as you props update component will run render function to render your component in browser. mapDispatchToProps also stores key-values on the props of your component, usually they take a form of a function. In such way you can trigger state change from your component onClick, onChange events.

From docs:

const TodoListComponent = ({ todos, onTodoClick }) => (
  <ul>
    {todos.map(todo =>
      <Todo
        key={todo.id}
        {...todo}
        onClick={() => onTodoClick(todo.id)}
      />
    )}
  </ul>
)

const mapStateToProps = (state) => {
  return {
    todos: getVisibleTodos(state.todos, state.visibilityFilter)
  }
}

const mapDispatchToProps = (dispatch) => {
  return {
    onTodoClick: (id) => {
      dispatch(toggleTodo(id))
    }
  }
}

function toggleTodo(index) {
  return { type: TOGGLE_TODO, index }
}

const TodoList = connect(
  mapStateToProps,
  mapDispatchToProps
)(TodoList) 

Also make sure that you are familiar with React stateless functions and Higher-Order Components

Solution 5 - Reactjs

Now suppose there is an action for redux as:

export function addTodo(text) {
  return {
    type: ADD_TODO,
    text
  }
}

When you do import it,

import {addTodo} from './actions';

class Greeting extends React.Component {

    handleOnClick = () => {
        this.props.onTodoClick(); // This prop acts as key to callback prop for mapDispatchToProps
    }

    render() {
        return <button onClick={this.handleOnClick}>Hello Redux</button>;
    }
}

const mapDispatchToProps = dispatch => {
    return {
      onTodoClick: () => { // handles onTodoClick prop's call here
        dispatch(addTodo())
      }
    }
}
  
export default connect(
    null,
    mapDispatchToProps
)(Greeting);

As function name says mapDispatchToProps(), map dispatch action to props(our component's props)

So prop onTodoClick is a key to mapDispatchToProps function which delegates furthere to dispatch action addTodo.

Also if you want to trim the code and bypass manual implementation, then you can do this,

import {addTodo} from './actions';
class Greeting extends React.Component {

    handleOnClick = () => {
        this.props.addTodo();
    }

    render() {
        return <button onClick={this.handleOnClick}>Hello Redux</button>;
    }
}

export default connect(
    null,
    {addTodo}
)(Greeting);

Which exactly means

const mapDispatchToProps = dispatch => {
    return {
      addTodo: () => { 
        dispatch(addTodo())
      }
    }
}

Solution 6 - Reactjs

mapStateToProps receives the state and props and allows you to extract props from the state to pass to the component.

mapDispatchToProps receives dispatch and props and is meant for you to bind action creators to dispatch so when you execute the resulting function the action gets dispatched.

I find this only saves you from having to do dispatch(actionCreator()) within your component thus making it a bit easier to read.

React redux: connect: Arguments

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