skills/react-state-management/SKILL.md
Master modern React state management with Redux Toolkit, Zustand, Jotai, and React Query. Use when setting up global state, managing server state, or choosing between state management solutions.
npx skillsauth add ruanmalvao-web/lp react-state-managementInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
3 of 9 scanners reported clean
Some scanners were skipped, did not run, or reported a non-clean status. Review each row below.
Comprehensive guide to modern React state management patterns, from local component state to global stores and server state synchronization.
resources/implementation-playbook.md.| Type | Description | Solutions | |------|-------------|-----------| | Local State | Component-specific, UI state | useState, useReducer | | Global State | Shared across components | Redux Toolkit, Zustand, Jotai | | Server State | Remote data, caching | React Query, SWR, RTK Query | | URL State | Route parameters, search | React Router, nuqs | | Form State | Input values, validation | React Hook Form, Formik |
Small app, simple state → Zustand or Jotai
Large app, complex state → Redux Toolkit
Heavy server interaction → React Query + light client state
Atomic/granular updates → Jotai
// store/useStore.ts
import { create } from 'zustand'
import { devtools, persist } from 'zustand/middleware'
interface AppState {
user: User | null
theme: 'light' | 'dark'
setUser: (user: User | null) => void
toggleTheme: () => void
}
export const useStore = create<AppState>()(
devtools(
persist(
(set) => ({
user: null,
theme: 'light',
setUser: (user) => set({ user }),
toggleTheme: () => set((state) => ({
theme: state.theme === 'light' ? 'dark' : 'light'
})),
}),
{ name: 'app-storage' }
)
)
)
// Usage in component
function Header() {
const { user, theme, toggleTheme } = useStore()
return (
<header className={theme}>
{user?.name}
<button onClick={toggleTheme}>Toggle Theme</button>
</header>
)
}
// store/index.ts
import { configureStore } from '@reduxjs/toolkit'
import { TypedUseSelectorHook, useDispatch, useSelector } from 'react-redux'
import userReducer from './slices/userSlice'
import cartReducer from './slices/cartSlice'
export const store = configureStore({
reducer: {
user: userReducer,
cart: cartReducer,
},
middleware: (getDefaultMiddleware) =>
getDefaultMiddleware({
serializableCheck: {
ignoredActions: ['persist/PERSIST'],
},
}),
})
export type RootState = ReturnType<typeof store.getState>
export type AppDispatch = typeof store.dispatch
// Typed hooks
export const useAppDispatch: () => AppDispatch = useDispatch
export const useAppSelector: TypedUseSelectorHook<RootState> = useSelector
// store/slices/userSlice.ts
import { createSlice, createAsyncThunk, PayloadAction } from '@reduxjs/toolkit'
interface User {
id: string
email: string
name: string
}
interface UserState {
current: User | null
status: 'idle' | 'loading' | 'succeeded' | 'failed'
error: string | null
}
const initialState: UserState = {
current: null,
status: 'idle',
error: null,
}
export const fetchUser = createAsyncThunk(
'user/fetchUser',
async (userId: string, { rejectWithValue }) => {
try {
const response = await fetch(`/api/users/${userId}`)
if (!response.ok) throw new Error('Failed to fetch user')
return await response.json()
} catch (error) {
return rejectWithValue((error as Error).message)
}
}
)
const userSlice = createSlice({
name: 'user',
initialState,
reducers: {
setUser: (state, action: PayloadAction<User>) => {
state.current = action.payload
state.status = 'succeeded'
},
clearUser: (state) => {
state.current = null
state.status = 'idle'
},
},
extraReducers: (builder) => {
builder
.addCase(fetchUser.pending, (state) => {
state.status = 'loading'
state.error = null
})
.addCase(fetchUser.fulfilled, (state, action) => {
state.status = 'succeeded'
state.current = action.payload
})
.addCase(fetchUser.rejected, (state, action) => {
state.status = 'failed'
state.error = action.payload as string
})
},
})
export const { setUser, clearUser } = userSlice.actions
export default userSlice.reducer
// store/slices/createUserSlice.ts
import { StateCreator } from 'zustand'
export interface UserSlice {
user: User | null
isAuthenticated: boolean
login: (credentials: Credentials) => Promise<void>
logout: () => void
}
export const createUserSlice: StateCreator<
UserSlice & CartSlice, // Combined store type
[],
[],
UserSlice
> = (set, get) => ({
user: null,
isAuthenticated: false,
login: async (credentials) => {
const user = await authApi.login(credentials)
set({ user, isAuthenticated: true })
},
logout: () => {
set({ user: null, isAuthenticated: false })
// Can access other slices
// get().clearCart()
},
})
// store/index.ts
import { create } from 'zustand'
import { createUserSlice, UserSlice } from './slices/createUserSlice'
import { createCartSlice, CartSlice } from './slices/createCartSlice'
type StoreState = UserSlice & CartSlice
export const useStore = create<StoreState>()((...args) => ({
...createUserSlice(...args),
...createCartSlice(...args),
}))
// Selective subscriptions (prevents unnecessary re-renders)
export const useUser = () => useStore((state) => state.user)
export const useCart = () => useStore((state) => state.cart)
// atoms/userAtoms.ts
import { atom } from 'jotai'
import { atomWithStorage } from 'jotai/utils'
// Basic atom
export const userAtom = atom<User | null>(null)
// Derived atom (computed)
export const isAuthenticatedAtom = atom((get) => get(userAtom) !== null)
// Atom with localStorage persistence
export const themeAtom = atomWithStorage<'light' | 'dark'>('theme', 'light')
// Async atom
export const userProfileAtom = atom(async (get) => {
const user = get(userAtom)
if (!user) return null
const response = await fetch(`/api/users/${user.id}/profile`)
return response.json()
})
// Write-only atom (action)
export const logoutAtom = atom(null, (get, set) => {
set(userAtom, null)
set(cartAtom, [])
localStorage.removeItem('token')
})
// Usage
function Profile() {
const [user] = useAtom(userAtom)
const [, logout] = useAtom(logoutAtom)
const [profile] = useAtom(userProfileAtom) // Suspense-enabled
return (
<Suspense fallback={<Skeleton />}>
<ProfileContent profile={profile} onLogout={logout} />
</Suspense>
)
}
// hooks/useUsers.ts
import { useQuery, useMutation, useQueryClient } from '@tanstack/react-query'
// Query keys factory
export const userKeys = {
all: ['users'] as const,
lists: () => [...userKeys.all, 'list'] as const,
list: (filters: UserFilters) => [...userKeys.lists(), filters] as const,
details: () => [...userKeys.all, 'detail'] as const,
detail: (id: string) => [...userKeys.details(), id] as const,
}
// Fetch hook
export function useUsers(filters: UserFilters) {
return useQuery({
queryKey: userKeys.list(filters),
queryFn: () => fetchUsers(filters),
staleTime: 5 * 60 * 1000, // 5 minutes
gcTime: 30 * 60 * 1000, // 30 minutes (formerly cacheTime)
})
}
// Single user hook
export function useUser(id: string) {
return useQuery({
queryKey: userKeys.detail(id),
queryFn: () => fetchUser(id),
enabled: !!id, // Don't fetch if no id
})
}
// Mutation with optimistic update
export function useUpdateUser() {
const queryClient = useQueryClient()
return useMutation({
mutationFn: updateUser,
onMutate: async (newUser) => {
// Cancel outgoing refetches
await queryClient.cancelQueries({ queryKey: userKeys.detail(newUser.id) })
// Snapshot previous value
const previousUser = queryClient.getQueryData(userKeys.detail(newUser.id))
// Optimistically update
queryClient.setQueryData(userKeys.detail(newUser.id), newUser)
return { previousUser }
},
onError: (err, newUser, context) => {
// Rollback on error
queryClient.setQueryData(
userKeys.detail(newUser.id),
context?.previousUser
)
},
onSettled: (data, error, variables) => {
// Refetch after mutation
queryClient.invalidateQueries({ queryKey: userKeys.detail(variables.id) })
},
})
}
// Zustand for client state
const useUIStore = create<UIState>((set) => ({
sidebarOpen: true,
modal: null,
toggleSidebar: () => set((s) => ({ sidebarOpen: !s.sidebarOpen })),
openModal: (modal) => set({ modal }),
closeModal: () => set({ modal: null }),
}))
// React Query for server state
function Dashboard() {
const { sidebarOpen, toggleSidebar } = useUIStore()
const { data: users, isLoading } = useUsers({ active: true })
const { data: stats } = useStats()
if (isLoading) return <DashboardSkeleton />
return (
<div className={sidebarOpen ? 'with-sidebar' : ''}>
<Sidebar open={sidebarOpen} onToggle={toggleSidebar} />
<main>
<StatsCards stats={stats} />
<UserTable users={users} />
</main>
</div>
)
}
// Before (legacy Redux)
const ADD_TODO = 'ADD_TODO'
const addTodo = (text) => ({ type: ADD_TODO, payload: text })
function todosReducer(state = [], action) {
switch (action.type) {
case ADD_TODO:
return [...state, { text: action.payload, completed: false }]
default:
return state
}
}
// After (Redux Toolkit)
const todosSlice = createSlice({
name: 'todos',
initialState: [],
reducers: {
addTodo: (state, action: PayloadAction<string>) => {
// Immer allows "mutations"
state.push({ text: action.payload, completed: false })
},
},
})
tools
No-code automation democratizes workflow building. Zapier and Make (formerly Integromat) let non-developers automate business processes without writing code. But no-code doesn't mean no-complexity - these platforms have their own patterns, pitfalls, and breaking points. This skill covers when to use which platform, how to build reliable automations, and when to graduate to code-based solutions. Key insight: Zapier optimizes for simplicity and integrations (7000+ apps), Make optimizes for power
tools
This skill should be used when the user asks to "test for XSS vulnerabilities", "perform cross-site scripting attacks", "identify HTML injection flaws", "exploit client-side injection vulnerabilities", "steal cookies via XSS", or "bypass content security policies". It provides comprehensive techniques for detecting, exploiting, and understanding XSS and HTML injection attack vectors in web applications.
development
Comprehensive spreadsheet creation, editing, and analysis with support for formulas, formatting, data analysis, and visualization. When Claude needs to work with spreadsheets (.xlsx, .xlsm, .csv, .tsv, etc) for: (1) Creating new spreadsheets with formulas and formatting, (2) Reading or analyzing data, (3) Modify existing spreadsheets while preserving formulas, (4) Data analysis and visualization in spreadsheets, or (5) Recalculating formulas
tools
Publish articles to X/Twitter