1. 11
    Combining Data from Two Redux Slices to Build our Shopping Cart
    1m 53s

Combining Data from Two Redux Slices to Build our Shopping Cart

Jamund Ferguson
InstructorJamund Ferguson
Share this video with your friends

Social Share Links

Send Tweet
Published 3 years ago
Updated 3 years ago

This lesson is pretty straightforward but demonstrates how we're combining data from two different redux slices in a single component. We have product data from the productsSlice and shopping cart information from the cartSlice. Neither of these is sufficient on its own, so it requires us to combine them at render-time. It's pretty common to have 5 or 6 selector functions at the top of a large component.

Note: One thing missing from the lesson is that our <tr> element needs a key={id} to ensure React handles updates properly. You'll likely see a warning in your console about this.

Jamund Ferguson: [0:00] Our Shopping Cart page is currently full of fake data. None of the products listed are even products available in our store. Let's fix that.

[0:07] Open up the Cart.tsx file in your IDE. Import useAppSelector from app/hooks. At the top of your Cart component, type const products = useAppSelector(state => state.product.products). Below that, type const items = useAppSelector(state => state.cart.items). We're going to use these two Redux powered values to populate our Shopping Cart page.

[0:32] Down in the body of our shopping cart, type {Object.entries(items).map}. We're going to pass in an arrow function where we destructure two values off of Object.entries, id and quantity. For that function, we're going to use parentheses to directly return JSX from our function body where it currently says Magnifying Glass. We're going to say {products [id] .name}.

[0:59] We'll do the same thing in other places. We'll do the same thing for price here. Down here where there's a label, you can actually use curly brackets and template literal and say Remove ${{products [id] .name}} from Shopping Cart. Up here in our input field, instead of default value 21, let's actually use the quantity value that we get from our map.

[1:21] If you haven't used Object.entries before, it takes an object and splits it into an array of arrays. Each key-value pair inside your object will be an array with the key as the first item and the value as the second item in the array. We're just looping over those arrays and converting them into JSX.

[1:39] Now, let's get rid of our unused mock data here. Let's go back to our Shopping Cart. It's now empty. Let's add some bananas, headphones, a couple of candles. You can see that they're all correctly being displayed in our Shopping Cart.

egghead
egghead
~ 8 minutes ago

Member comments are a way for members to communicate, interact, and ask questions about a lesson.

The instructor or someone from the community might respond to your question Here are a few basic guidelines to commenting on egghead.io

Be on-Topic

Comments are for discussing a lesson. If you're having a general issue with the website functionality, please contact us at support@egghead.io.

Avoid meta-discussion

  • This was great!
  • This was horrible!
  • I didn't like this because it didn't match my skill level.
  • +1 It will likely be deleted as spam.

Code Problems?

Should be accompanied by code! Codesandbox or Stackblitz provide a way to share code and discuss it in context

Details and Context

Vague question? Vague answer. Any details and context you can provide will lure more interesting answers!

Markdown supported.
Become a member to join the discussionEnroll Today