"use strict"; exports.__esModule = true; exports.default = useMergeState; var _react = require("react"); function _extends() { _extends = Object.assign || function (target) { for (var i = 1; i < arguments.length; i++) { var source = arguments[i]; for (var key in source) { if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(source, key)) { target[key] = source[key]; } } } return target; }; return _extends.apply(this, arguments); } /** * Mimics a React class component's state model, of having a single unified * `state` object and an updater that merges updates into the existing state, as * opposed to replacing it. * * ```js * const [state, setState] = useMergeState({ name: 'Betsy', age: 24 }) * * setState({ name: 'Johan' }) // { name: 'Johan', age: 24 } * * setState(state => ({ age: state.age + 10 })) // { name: 'Johan', age: 34 } * ``` * * @param initialState The initial state object */ function useMergeState(initialState) { var _useState = (0, _react.useState)(initialState), state = _useState[0], setState = _useState[1]; var updater = (0, _react.useCallback)(function (update) { if (update === null) return; if (typeof update === 'function') { setState(function (state) { var nextState = update(state); return nextState == null ? state : _extends({}, state, {}, nextState); }); } else { setState(function (state) { return _extends({}, state, {}, update); }); } }, [setState]); return [state, updater]; }