1

1.Can someone help me where i made a thing wrong? 2.the component i am mapping the state to its properties but i still get this error"mapStateToProps is not defined" this is the whole component below. the error reads "mapStateToProps not defined"

    import React, {Component} from 'react';
    import Icon from 'react-native-vector-icons/EvilIcons';
    import  { loadInitialPosts} from './actions';
    import {connect } from 'react-redux';  
    import _ from 'lodash';
    import {View, StyleSheet,FlatList} from  'react-native';
    import PostItem from './PostItem';
    import PostDetail from './PostDetail';

    class PostsList extends Component {

    componentWillMount() {
        this.props.loadInitialPosts();
    }
    renderItem({item}){
        return <PostItem posts = { item } />;
    }
    renderInitialView(){
        if(this.props.postDetailView === true){
            return(
               <PostDetail />
          );
        } 
    else{
        return(
            <FlatList 
            data={this.props.posts} 
            renderItem={this.renderItem} />
           )}
         }
    render(){
        return(
            <View style={styles.list}>
                {this.renderInitialView()}
            </View>
              );
            }
            }
    const mapStateToProps = state => {
        const posts = _.map(state.posts, (val, id) => 
          {
            return { ...val, id};
          });
        return{ 
            posts: posts,
            postDetailView: state.postDetailView,
              };
                              }
    export default connect(mapStateToProps, { loadInitialPosts })(PostsList)

1.This is the action that dispatches the data

     export const loadInitialPosts = () => { 
         return function(dispatch){
             return axios.get(apiHost 
                +"/api/get_posts? 
                count=20")
             .then((response) => {
                 dispatch({ type: 
                 'INITIAL_POSTS_FETCH', payload: 
                  response.data.posts});
              }).catch((err) => {
                    console.log(err);
            });
        };
    };
2
  • please include the code that shows your use of connect() Feb 11, 2019 at 1:39
  • @DacreDenny thanks i have edited the question. export default connect(mapStateToProps, { loadInitialPosts })(PostsList) Feb 11, 2019 at 2:03

2 Answers 2

5

mapStateToProps sits outside of the class before export default connect(mapStateToProps)(SomeClass)

class SomeClass extends React.Component {
  ...
}

const mapStateToProps = state => {
  const posts = _.map(state.posts, (val, id) => {
    return { ...val,
      id
    };
  });
  return {
    posts: posts,
    postDetailView: state.postDetailView,
  };
}

3
  • Is there any way you could share the whole component?
    – Ziyo
    Feb 11, 2019 at 3:06
  • sure, i have edited the question. showing the whole component Feb 11, 2019 at 12:30
  • what was the issue? I am curious to know
    – Ziyo
    Feb 11, 2019 at 14:35
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To eliminate the possibility of mapStateToProps being undefined, consider defining the mapStateToProps directly in the call to connect() like this:

class PostsList extends React.Component {

    componentWillMount() {

        this.props.loadInitialPosts();
    }

    renderItem({item}){

        return <PostItem posts = { item } />;
    }

    renderInitialView(){

        if(this.props.postDetailView === true){
            return <PostDetail />;
        } 
        else{
            return <FlatList 
            data={this.props.posts} 
            renderItem={this.renderItem} />
        }
    }

    render(){

        return(<View style={styles.list}> {this.renderInitialView()} </View>);
    }
}

/* 
Avoid declaration of mapStateToProps object by defining this object
directly in the call to connect()
*/
export default connect((state => {

    return {
        posts : state.posts.map((val, id) => ({ ...val, id })),
        postDetailView: state.postDetailView,
    }

}), { loadInitialPosts })(PostsList)
0

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