react-redux package. It provides a way for you to pass Redux state and dispatch to your React components as props.
Over the next few challenges, first, you'll create a simple React component which allows you to input new text messages. These are added to an array that's displayed in the view. This should be a nice review of what you learned in the React lessons. Next, you'll create a Redux store and actions that manage the state of the messages array. Finally, you'll use react-redux to connect the Redux store with your component, thereby extracting the local state into the Redux store.
DisplayMessages component. Add a constructor to this component and initialize it with a state that has two properties: input, that's set to an empty string, and messages, that's set to an empty array.
DisplayMessages component should render an empty div element.
testString: assert((function() { const mockedComponent = Enzyme.mount(React.createElement(DisplayMessages)); return mockedComponent.find('div').text() === '' })());
- text: The DisplayMessages constructor should be called properly with super, passing in props.
testString: getUserInput => assert((function() { const noWhiteSpace = getUserInput('index').replace(/\s/g,''); return noWhiteSpace.includes('constructor(props)') && noWhiteSpace.includes('super(props'); })());
- text: 'The DisplayMessages component should have an initial state equal to {input: "", messages: []}.'
testString: "assert((function() { const mockedComponent = Enzyme.mount(React.createElement(DisplayMessages)); const initialState = mockedComponent.state(); return typeof initialState === 'object' && initialState.input === '' && Array.isArray(initialState.messages) && initialState.messages.length === 0; })());"
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