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How to Share Serializable Data Between React Components in Next.jsby@asmyshlyaev177
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How to Share Serializable Data Between React Components in Next.js

by asmyshlyaev177August 16th, 2024
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Want to show how you can share any serializable data between React components in NextJS. We can store data in a `WeakMap`, `state` will be a key to access it, and `subscribers` array.
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I want to demonstrate how you can share any serializable data between React components, e.g. client components in NextJS.


Let’s say we have few unrelated components:

Example app UI

Let's create an object that will contain initial state

export const state: { count: number } = { count: 0 };


We can store data in a WeakMap, state will be a key to access it. Also, will need a subscribers array.

const stateMap = new WeakMap<object, object>();
const subscribers: (() => void)[] = [];


Now let's write a hook to subscribe to data changes:

export function useCommonState<T extends object>(stateObj: T) {
  // more efficient than `useEffect` since we don't have any deps
  React.useInsertionEffect(() => {
    const cb = () => {
      const val = stateMap.get(stateObj);
      _setState(val!);
    };
    // subscribe to events
    subscribers.push(cb);

    return () => {
      subscribers.slice(subscribers.indexOf(cb), 1);
    };
  }, []);
}


Now let's add logic related to get and set state:

  // all instances of hook will point to same object reference
  const [state, _setState] = React.useState<typeof stateObj>(() => {
    const val = stateMap.get(stateObj) as T;
    if (!val) {
      stateMap.set(stateObj, stateObj)
      return stateObj
    }
    return val
  });

  const setState = React.useCallback((newVal: object) => {
    // update value
    stateMap.set(stateObj, newVal);
    // notify all hook instances
    subscribers.forEach((sub) => sub());
  }, []);

  return { state, setState };


And now can use it in 3 components like:

import { state as myState } from './state';
//...

const { state, setState } = useCommonState(myState);

<button
  onClick={() => setState({ count: state.count + 1 })}
  className="p-2 border"
>
  +
</button>
// ...
Component A<div>Count: {state.count}</div>

Final app


You can see how it works here:

Or in GitHub: https://github.com/asmyshlyaev177/react-common-state-example


Check out my library for NextJS based on this principle https://github.com/asmyshlyaev177/state-in-url

Thanks for reading!