Redux Toolkit TypeScript Quick Start
- How to set up and use Redux Toolkit and React-Redux with TypeScript
- Knowledge of React Hooks
- Understanding of Redux terms and concepts
- Understanding of TypeScript syntax and concepts
Introduction
Welcome to the Redux Toolkit TypeScript Quick Start tutorial! This tutorial will briefly show how to use TypeScript with Redux Toolkit and React-Redux.
This page focuses on just how to set up the TypeScript aspects . For explanations of what Redux is, how it works, and full examples of how to use Redux Toolkit, see the tutorials linked in the "Tutorials Index" page.
Redux Toolkit is already written in TypeScript, so its TS type definitions are built in.
React Redux is also written in TypeScript as of version 8, and also includes its own type definitions.
The Redux+TS template for Create-React-App comes with a working example of these patterns already configured.
Project Setup
Define Root State and Dispatch Types
Redux Toolkit's configureStore
API should not need any additional typings. You will, however, want to extract the RootState
type and the Dispatch
type so that they can be referenced as needed. Inferring these types from the store itself means that they correctly update as you add more state slices or modify middleware settings.
Since those are types, it's safe to export them directly from your store setup file such as app/store.ts
and import them directly into other files.
import { configureStore } from '@reduxjs/toolkit'
// ...
const store = configureStore({
reducer: {
posts: postsReducer,
comments: commentsReducer,
users: usersReducer
}
})
// Infer the `RootState` and `AppDispatch` types from the store itself
export type RootState = ReturnType<typeof store.getState>
// Inferred type: {posts: PostsState, comments: CommentsState, users: UsersState}
export type AppDispatch = typeof store.dispatch
Define Typed Hooks
While it's possible to import the RootState
and AppDispatch
types into each component, it's better to create typed versions of the useDispatch
and useSelector
hooks for usage in your application. This is important for a couple reasons:
- For
useSelector
, it saves you the need to type(state: RootState)
every time - For
useDispatch
, the defaultDispatch
type does not know about thunks. In order to correctly dispatch thunks, you need to use the specific customizedAppDispatch
type from the store that includes the thunk middleware types, and use that withuseDispatch
. Adding a pre-typeduseDispatch
hook keeps you from forgetting to importAppDispatch
where it's needed.
Since these are actual variables, not types, it's important to define them in a separate file such as app/hooks.ts
, not the store setup file. This allows you to import them into any component file that needs to use the hooks, and avoids potential circular import dependency issues.
import { TypedUseSelectorHook, useDispatch, useSelector } from 'react-redux'
import type { RootState, AppDispatch } from './store'
// Use throughout your app instead of plain `useDispatch` and `useSelector`
export const useAppDispatch: () => AppDispatch = useDispatch
export const useAppSelector: TypedUseSelectorHook<RootState> = useSelector
Application Usage
Define Slice State and Action Types
Each slice file should define a type for its initial state value, so that createSlice
can correctly infer the type of state
in each case reducer.
All generated actions should be defined using the PayloadAction<T>
type from Redux Toolkit, which takes the type of the action.payload
field as its generic argument.
You can safely import the RootState
type from the store file here. It's a circular import, but the TypeScript compiler can correctly handle that for types. This may be needed for use cases like writing selector functions.
import { createSlice, PayloadAction } from '@reduxjs/toolkit'
import type { RootState } from '../../app/store'
// Define a type for the slice state
export interface CounterState {
value: number
}
// Define the initial state using that type
const initialState: CounterState = {
value: 0
}
export const counterSlice = createSlice({
name: 'counter',
// `createSlice` will infer the state type from the `initialState` argument
initialState,
reducers: {
increment: state => {
state.value += 1
},
decrement: state => {
state.value -= 1
},
// Use the PayloadAction type to declare the contents of `action.payload`
incrementByAmount: (state, action: PayloadAction<number>) => {
state.value += action.payload
}
}
})
export const { increment, decrement, incrementByAmount } = counterSlice.actions
// Other code such as selectors can use the imported `RootState` type
export const selectCount = (state: RootState) => state.counter.value
export default counterSlice.reducer
The generated action creators will be correctly typed to accept a payload
argument based on the PayloadAction<T>
type you provided for the reducer. For example, incrementByAmount
requires a number
as its argument.
In some cases, TypeScript may unnecessarily tighten the type of the initial state. If that happens, you can work around it by casting the initial state using as
, instead of declaring the type of the variable:
// Workaround: cast state instead of declaring variable type
const initialState = {
value: 0
} as CounterState
Use Typed Hooks in Components
In component files, import the pre-typed hooks instead of the standard hooks from React-Redux.
import React from 'react'
import { useAppSelector, useAppDispatch } from 'app/hooks'
import { decrement, increment } from './counterSlice'
export function Counter() {
// The `state` arg is correctly typed as `RootState` already
const count = useAppSelector(state => state.counter.value)
const dispatch = useAppDispatch()
// omit rendering logic
}
Full Counter App Example
Here's the complete TS counter application as a running CodeSandbox:
What's Next?
We recommend going through the full "Redux Essentials" tutorial, which covers all of the key pieces included in Redux Toolkit, what problems they solve, and how to use them to build real-world applications.
You may also want to read through the "Redux Fundamentals" tutorial, which will give you a complete understanding of how Redux works, what Redux Toolkit does, and how to use it correctly.
Finally, see the "Usage with TypeScript" page for extended details on how to use Redux Toolkit's APIs with TypeScript.