* fix(curriculum): tests quotes * fix(curriculum): fill seed-teardown * fix(curriculum): fix tests and remove unneeded seed-teardown
		
			
				
	
	
		
			98 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
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			98 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
| ---
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| id: 5a24c314108439a4d4036159
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| title: Use the Spread Operator on Arrays
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| challengeType: 6
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| isRequired: false
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| ---
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| 
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| ## Description
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| <section id='description'>
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| One solution from ES6 to help enforce state immutability in Redux is the spread operator: <code>...</code>. The spread operator has a variety of applications, one of which is well-suited to the previous challenge of producing a new array from an existing array. This is relatively new, but commonly used syntax. For example, if you have an array <code>myArray</code> and write:
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| <code>let newArray = [...myArray];</code>
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| <code>newArray</code> is now a clone of <code>myArray</code>. Both arrays still exist separately in memory. If you perform a mutation like <code>newArray.push(5)</code>, <code>myArray</code> doesn't change. The <code>...</code> effectively <i>spreads</i> out the values in <code>myArray</code> into a new array. To clone an array but add additional values in the new array, you could write <code>[...myArray, 'new value']</code>. This would return a new array composed of the values in <code>myArray</code> and the string <code>'new value'</code> as the last value. The spread syntax can be used multiple times in array composition like this, but it's important to note that it only makes a shallow copy of the array. That is to say, it only provides immutable array operations for one-dimensional arrays.
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| </section>
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| 
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| ## Instructions
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| <section id='instructions'>
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| Use the spread operator to return a new copy of state when a to-do is added.
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| </section>
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| 
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| ## Tests
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| <section id='tests'>
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| 
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| ```yml
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| tests:
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|   - text: The Redux store should exist and initialize with a state equal to <code>[Do not mutate state!]</code>.
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|     testString: assert((function() { const initialState = store.getState(); return ( Array.isArray(initialState) === true && initialState[0] === 'Do not mutate state!'); })(), 'The Redux store should exist and initialize with a state equal to <code>[Do not mutate state!]</code>.');
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|   - text: <code>addToDo</code> and <code>immutableReducer</code> both should be functions.
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|     testString: assert(typeof addToDo === 'function' && typeof immutableReducer === 'function', '<code>addToDo</code> and <code>immutableReducer</code> both should be functions.');
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|   - text: Dispatching an action of type <code>ADD_TO_DO</code> on the Redux store should add a <code>todo</code> item and should NOT mutate state.
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|     testString: assert((function() { const initialState = store.getState(); const isFrozen = DeepFreeze(initialState); store.dispatch(addToDo('__TEST__TO__DO__')); const finalState = store.getState(); const expectedState = [ 'Do not mutate state!', '__TEST__TO__DO__' ]; return( isFrozen && DeepEqual(finalState, expectedState)); })(), 'Dispatching an action of type <code>ADD_TO_DO</code> on the Redux store should add a <code>todo</code> item and should NOT mutate state.');
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|   - text: The spread operator should be used to return new state.
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|     testString: getUserInput => assert(getUserInput('index').includes('...state'), 'The spread operator should be used to return new state.');
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| 
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| ```
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| 
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| </section>
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| 
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| ## Challenge Seed
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| <section id='challengeSeed'>
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| 
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| <div id='jsx-seed'>
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| 
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| ```jsx
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| const immutableReducer = (state = ['Do not mutate state!'], action) => {
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|   switch(action.type) {
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|     case 'ADD_TO_DO':
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|       // don't mutate state here or the tests will fail
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|       return
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|     default:
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|       return state;
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|   }
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| };
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| 
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| const addToDo = (todo) => {
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|   return {
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|     type: 'ADD_TO_DO',
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|     todo
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|   }
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| }
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| 
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| const store = Redux.createStore(immutableReducer);
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| ```
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| 
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| </div>
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| 
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| 
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| 
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| </section>
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| 
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| ## Solution
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| <section id='solution'>
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| 
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| 
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| ```js
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| const immutableReducer = (state = ['Do not mutate state!'], action) => {
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|   switch(action.type) {
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|     case 'ADD_TO_DO':
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|       return [
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|         ...state,
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|         action.todo
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|       ];
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|     default:
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|       return state;
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|   }
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| };
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| 
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| const addToDo = (todo) => {
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|   return {
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|     type: 'ADD_TO_DO',
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|     todo
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|   }
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| }
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| 
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| const store = Redux.createStore(immutableReducer);
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| ```
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| 
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| </section>
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