sample

Formulae

sample({ source, clock, target, fn? }): target

When clock is triggered, read the value from source and trigger target with it.

  • If the fn is passed, pass value from source through before passing to target
  • If the target is not passed, create it and return from sample()

Type of the created target

If target is not passed to sample() call, it will be created inside. The type of the unit described in the table below:

clock\sourceStoreEventEffect
StoreStoreEventEvent
EventEventEventEvent
EffectEventEventEvent

How to read it:

  1. You need to know type of the source, it is column
  2. Type of the clock in the rows
  3. Match the column and the row

For example:

const $store = sample({ source: $store, clock: $store });
// Result will be store, because source and clock are stores.
const event = sample({ source: $store, clock: event });
// Because not all arguments are storess

sample(sourceStore, clockEvent, fn?)

Overall this method can be used in order to link two nodes, resulting the third one, which will fire only upon clock node trigger.

Passes current sourceStore's state and clockEvent's value to fn handler. Quite a common case when you need to handle some event with some store's state. Instead of using store.getState(), in body of effect, which may cause race conditions and inconsistency of state at the moment of effect's handler invocation, it is more appropriate to use sample method as described below.

Arguments

  1. sourceStore (Store): Source store
  2. clockEvent (Event): Clock(Trigger) event
  3. fn? ((source, clock) => result): Optional combinator function, should be pure. Since, this handler is supposed to organize data flow, you should avoid declaring side-effects here. It's more appropriate to place it in watch method for sampled node.

Returns

Event, which fires upon clock is triggered

Example 1

import {createStore, createEvent, sample} from 'effector'
const store = createStore('hello zerobias')
const event = createEvent()
const sampled = sample(store, event)
sampled.watch(console.log)
event() // => hello zerobias

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Example 2

import {createStore, createEvent, sample} from 'effector'
const login = createStore('peter')
const sendMessage = createEvent()
const fullMessage = sample(login, sendMessage, (login, text) => ({login, text}))
fullMessage.watch(({login, text}) => {
console.log(`[${login}]: ${text}`)
})
sendMessage('hello')
// => [peter]: hello
sendMessage('how r u?')
// => [peter]: how r u?

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sample(sourceEvent, clockEvent, fn?)

Passes last sourceEvent invocation argument value and clockEvent value to fn handler.

Arguments

  1. sourceEvent (Event): Source event
  2. clockEvent (Event): Clock(Trigger) event
  3. fn? ((source, clock) => result): Optional combinator function, should be pure

Returns

Event, which fires upon clock is triggered

Example

import {createEvent, sample} from 'effector'
const event1 = createEvent()
const event2 = createEvent()
const sampled = sample(event1, event2, (a, b) => `${a} ${b}`)
sampled.watch(console.log)
event1('Hello')
event2('World') // => Hello World
event2('effector!') // => Hello effector!
sampled('Can be invoked too!') // => Can be invoked too!

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sample(event, store, fn?)

Passes last event invocation argument value and store's updated state to fn handler.

Note: event must be invoked at least once.

Arguments

  1. event (Event): Source event
  2. store (Store): Triggers sampled unit upon store update
  3. fn? ((source, clock) => result): Optional combinator function, should be pure

Returns

Event, which fires upon clock is triggered

Example

import {createEvent, createStore, sample} from 'effector'
const event = createEvent()
const inc = createEvent()
const count = createStore(0).on(inc, state => state + 1)
const sampled = sample(
event,
count,
(c, i) => `Current count is ${i}, last event invocation: ${c}`,
)
sampled.watch(console.log)
inc() // => nothing
event('foo')
inc() // => Current count is 2, last event invocation: foo
event('bar')
inc() // => Current count is 3, last event invocation: bar

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sample(sourceStore, clockStore, fn?)

Passes last sourceStore's current state and clockStore's updated state to fn handler, upon clockStore's update.

Arguments

  1. sourceStore (Store): Source store
  2. clockStore (Store): Triggers sampled unit upon store update
  3. fn? ((source, clock) => result): Optional combinator function, should be pure

Returns

Store, which updates upon clock update

Example

import {createEvent, createStore, sample} from 'effector'
const inc = createEvent()
const setName = createEvent()
const name = createStore('John').on(setName, (_, v) => v)
const clock = createStore(0).on(inc, i => i + 1)
const sampled = sample(name, clock, (name, i) => `${name} has ${i} coins`)
sampled.watch(console.log)
// => John has 0 coins (initial store update triggered sampled store)
setName('Doe')
inc() // => Doe has 1 coins

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sample({source, clock?, fn?, greedy?, target?})

Object-like arguments passing, working exactly the same as examples above do.

clock - trigger node, if not passed the source is used as clock

greedy modifier defines, whether sampler will wait of resolving calculation result, and will batch all updates, resulting only one trigger, either will be triggered upon every linked node invocation, e.g. if greedy is true, sampler will fire, upon trigger of every node, linked to clock, whereas non-greedy sampler(greedy: false) will fire upon the last linked node trigger.

target - can contain Unit, which accepts payload - returned by fn. If target passed, result will be the target itself. In case, target not passed, it's created "under the hood" and being returned as result of the function.

Arguments

  1. params (Object): Configuration object

Returns

(Event|Store) - Unit, which fires/updates upon clock is trigged

Example 1

import {sample, createStore, createEffect, createEvent} from 'effector'
const $user = createStore({name: 'john', password: 'doe'})
const signInFx = createEffect({handler: console.log})
const submitForm = createEvent()
const submitted = sample({
source: $user,
clock: submitForm,
fn: (user, params) => ({user, params}),
target: signInFx,
})
console.log(submitted === signInFx) // units are equal
submitForm('foo')

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Example 2

import {createEvent, createStore, sample} from 'effector'
const clickButton = createEvent()
const closeModal = clickButton.map(() => 'close modal')
const lastEvent = createStore(null)
.on(clickButton, (_, data) => data)
.on(closeModal, () => 'modal')
lastEvent.updates.watch(data => {
// here we need everything
//console.log(`sending important analytics event: ${data}`)
})
lastEvent.updates.watch(data => {
//here we need only final value
//console.log(`render <div class="yourstatus">${data}</div>`)
})
const analyticReportsEnabled = createStore(false)
const commonSampling = sample({
source: analyticReportsEnabled,
clock: merge([clickButton, closeModal]),
fn: (isEnabled, data) => ({isEnabled, data}),
})
const greedySampling = sample({
source: analyticReportsEnabled,
clock: merge([clickButton, closeModal]),
fn: (isEnabled, data) => ({isEnabled, data}),
greedy: true,
})
commonSampling.watch(data => console.log('non greedy update', data))
greedySampling.watch(data => console.log('greedy update', data))
clickButton('click A')
clickButton('click B')

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sample(sourceStore)

Shorthand for sample({ source: sourceStore, clock: sourceStore }), it can be used to make updates of sourceStore non-greedy, thus batching updates of sourceStore.

This is especially useful if we are combining different stores, and resulting store switches its state multiple times within single update. sample ensures it will fire only upon the last state

Arguments

  1. sourceStore (Store): Source store

Returns

Store - Non-greedy store

Example 1

import {createStore, createEffect, sample, combine} from 'effector'
const data = [{name: 'physics', id: 1}]
const fetchContentFx = createEffect({
handler: () => new Promise(resolve => setTimeout(() => resolve(data), 0)),
})
const $lessonIndex = createStore(0)
const $allLessons = createStore([]).on(
fetchContentFx.doneData,
(_, result) => result,
)
const $lesson = combine(
$lessonIndex,
$allLessons,
(idx, lessons) => lessons[idx],
)
const $modal = combine({
isPending: fetchContentFx.pending,
content: $lesson,
})
const $batchedModal = sample($modal)
$modal.updates.watch(v => console.log('modal update', v))
//=> modal update { isPending: true, content: undefined })
//=> modal update { isPending: false, content: undefined })
//=> modal update { isPending: false, content: Object })
// total 3 updates
$batchedModal.updates.watch(v => console.log('batchedModal update', v))
//=> batched modal update { isPending: true, content: undefined })
//=> batched modal update { isPending: false, content: Object })
// total 2 updates
fetchContentFx()

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Objects and arrays of Store in sample({ source })

Object of stores

sample can be called with object of (Store)[Store.md] as source:

import { createStore, createEvent, sample } from "effector";
const trigger = createEvent();
const a = createStore("A");
const b = createStore(1);
// Target has type `Event<{ a: string, b: number }>`
const target = sample({
source: { a, b },
clock: trigger
});
target.watch(obj => {
console.log("sampled object", obj);
// => {a: 'A', b: 1}
});

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Array of stores

sample can be called with array of (Store)[Store.md] as source:

import { createStore, createEvent, sample } from "effector";
const trigger = createEvent();
const a = createStore("A");
const b = createStore(1);
// Target has type `Event<[string, number]>`
const target = sample({
source: [a, b],
clock: trigger
});
target.watch(obj => {
console.log("sampled array", obj);
// => ["A", 1]
});
// You can easily destructure arguments to set explicit names
target.watch(([a, b]) => {
console.log("Explicit names", a, b);
// => "A" 1
});

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