fp-react
Practical patterns for using fp-ts with React - hooks, state, forms, data fetching. Works with React 18/19, Next.js 14/15.
What this skill does
# Functional Programming in React
Practical patterns for React apps. No jargon, just code that works.
---
## Quick Reference
| Pattern | Use When |
|---------|----------|
| `Option` | Value might be missing (user not loaded yet) |
| `Either` | Operation might fail (form validation) |
| `TaskEither` | Async operation might fail (API calls) |
| `RemoteData` | Need to show loading/error/success states |
| `pipe` | Chaining multiple transformations |
---
## 1. State with Option (Maybe It's There, Maybe Not)
Use `Option` instead of `null | undefined` for clearer intent.
### Basic Pattern
```typescript
import { useState } from 'react'
import * as O from 'fp-ts/Option'
import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function'
interface User {
id: string
name: string
email: string
}
function UserProfile() {
// Option says "this might not exist yet"
const [user, setUser] = useState<O.Option<User>>(O.none)
const handleLogin = (userData: User) => {
setUser(O.some(userData))
}
const handleLogout = () => {
setUser(O.none)
}
return pipe(
user,
O.match(
// When there's no user
() => <button onClick={() => handleLogin({ id: '1', name: 'Alice', email: '[email protected]' })}>
Log In
</button>,
// When there's a user
(u) => (
<div>
<p>Welcome, {u.name}!</p>
<button onClick={handleLogout}>Log Out</button>
</div>
)
)
)
}
```
### Chaining Optional Values
```typescript
import * as O from 'fp-ts/Option'
import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function'
interface Profile {
user: O.Option<{
name: string
settings: O.Option<{
theme: string
}>
}>
}
function getTheme(profile: Profile): string {
return pipe(
profile.user,
O.flatMap(u => u.settings),
O.map(s => s.theme),
O.getOrElse(() => 'light') // default
)
}
```
---
## 2. Form Validation with Either
Either is perfect for validation: `Left` = errors, `Right` = valid data.
### Simple Form Validation
```typescript
import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either'
import * as A from 'fp-ts/Array'
import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function'
// Validation functions return Either<ErrorMessage, ValidValue>
const validateEmail = (email: string): E.Either<string, string> =>
email.includes('@')
? E.right(email)
: E.left('Invalid email address')
const validatePassword = (password: string): E.Either<string, string> =>
password.length >= 8
? E.right(password)
: E.left('Password must be at least 8 characters')
const validateName = (name: string): E.Either<string, string> =>
name.trim().length > 0
? E.right(name.trim())
: E.left('Name is required')
```
### Collecting All Errors (Not Just First One)
```typescript
import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either'
import { sequenceS } from 'fp-ts/Apply'
import { getSemigroup } from 'fp-ts/NonEmptyArray'
import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function'
// This collects ALL errors, not just the first one
const validateAll = sequenceS(E.getApplicativeValidation(getSemigroup<string>()))
interface SignupForm {
name: string
email: string
password: string
}
interface ValidatedForm {
name: string
email: string
password: string
}
function validateForm(form: SignupForm): E.Either<string[], ValidatedForm> {
return pipe(
validateAll({
name: pipe(validateName(form.name), E.mapLeft(e => [e])),
email: pipe(validateEmail(form.email), E.mapLeft(e => [e])),
password: pipe(validatePassword(form.password), E.mapLeft(e => [e])),
})
)
}
// Usage in component
function SignupForm() {
const [form, setForm] = useState({ name: '', email: '', password: '' })
const [errors, setErrors] = useState<string[]>([])
const handleSubmit = () => {
pipe(
validateForm(form),
E.match(
(errs) => setErrors(errs), // Show all errors
(valid) => {
setErrors([])
submitToServer(valid) // Submit valid data
}
)
)
}
return (
<form onSubmit={e => { e.preventDefault(); handleSubmit() }}>
<input
value={form.name}
onChange={e => setForm(f => ({ ...f, name: e.target.value }))}
placeholder="Name"
/>
<input
value={form.email}
onChange={e => setForm(f => ({ ...f, email: e.target.value }))}
placeholder="Email"
/>
<input
type="password"
value={form.password}
onChange={e => setForm(f => ({ ...f, password: e.target.value }))}
placeholder="Password"
/>
{errors.length > 0 && (
<ul style={{ color: 'red' }}>
{errors.map((err, i) => <li key={i}>{err}</li>)}
</ul>
)}
<button type="submit">Sign Up</button>
</form>
)
}
```
### Field-Level Errors (Better UX)
```typescript
type FieldErrors = Partial<Record<keyof SignupForm, string>>
function validateFormWithFieldErrors(form: SignupForm): E.Either<FieldErrors, ValidatedForm> {
const errors: FieldErrors = {}
pipe(validateName(form.name), E.mapLeft(e => { errors.name = e }))
pipe(validateEmail(form.email), E.mapLeft(e => { errors.email = e }))
pipe(validatePassword(form.password), E.mapLeft(e => { errors.password = e }))
return Object.keys(errors).length > 0
? E.left(errors)
: E.right({ name: form.name.trim(), email: form.email, password: form.password })
}
// In component
{errors.email && <span className="error">{errors.email}</span>}
```
---
## 3. Data Fetching with TaskEither
TaskEither = async operation that might fail. Perfect for API calls.
### Basic Fetch Hook
```typescript
import { useState, useEffect } from 'react'
import * as TE from 'fp-ts/TaskEither'
import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either'
import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function'
// Wrap fetch in TaskEither
const fetchJson = <T>(url: string): TE.TaskEither<Error, T> =>
TE.tryCatch(
async () => {
const res = await fetch(url)
if (!res.ok) throw new Error(`HTTP ${res.status}`)
return res.json()
},
(err) => err instanceof Error ? err : new Error(String(err))
)
// Custom hook
function useFetch<T>(url: string) {
const [data, setData] = useState<T | null>(null)
const [error, setError] = useState<Error | null>(null)
const [loading, setLoading] = useState(true)
useEffect(() => {
setLoading(true)
setError(null)
pipe(
fetchJson<T>(url),
TE.match(
(err) => {
setError(err)
setLoading(false)
},
(result) => {
setData(result)
setLoading(false)
}
)
)()
}, [url])
return { data, error, loading }
}
// Usage
function UserList() {
const { data, error, loading } = useFetch<User[]>('/api/users')
if (loading) return <div>Loading...</div>
if (error) return <div>Error: {error.message}</div>
return (
<ul>
{data?.map(user => <li key={user.id}>{user.name}</li>)}
</ul>
)
}
```
### Chaining API Calls
```typescript
// Fetch user, then fetch their posts
const fetchUserWithPosts = (userId: string) => pipe(
fetchJson<User>(`/api/users/${userId}`),
TE.flatMap(user => pipe(
fetchJson<Post[]>(`/api/users/${userId}/posts`),
TE.map(posts => ({ ...user, posts }))
))
)
```
### Parallel API Calls
```typescript
import { sequenceT } from 'fp-ts/Apply'
// Fetch multiple things at once
const fetchDashboardData = () => pipe(
sequenceT(TE.ApplyPar)(
fetchJson<User>('/api/user'),
fetchJson<Stats>('/api/stats'),
fetchJson<Notifications[]>('/api/notifications')
),
TE.map(([user, stats, notifications]) => ({
user,
stats,
notifications
}))
)
```
---
## 4. RemoteData Pattern (The Right Way to Handle Async State)
Stop using `{ data, loading, error }` booleans. Use a proper state machine.
### The Pattern
```typescript
// RemoteData has exactly 4 states - no impossible combinations
type RemoteData<E, A> =
| { _tag: 'NotAsked' } // Haven't started yet
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