fp-ts-react

Practical patterns for using fp-ts with React - hooks, state, forms, data fetching. Use when building React apps with functional programming patterns. Works with React 18/19, Next.js 14/15.

30 stars

Best use case

fp-ts-react is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.

Practical patterns for using fp-ts with React - hooks, state, forms, data fetching. Use when building React apps with functional programming patterns. Works with React 18/19, Next.js 14/15.

Teams using fp-ts-react should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.

When to use this skill

  • You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.

When not to use this skill

  • You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
  • You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.

Installation

Claude Code / Cursor / Codex

$curl -o ~/.claude/skills/fp-ts-react/SKILL.md --create-dirs "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Zidong-IA/BIBLIOTECA/main/skills/skills/web-frontend/fp-ts-react/SKILL.md"

Manual Installation

  1. Download SKILL.md from GitHub
  2. Place it in .claude/skills/fp-ts-react/SKILL.md inside your project
  3. Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill

How fp-ts-react Compares

Feature / Agentfp-ts-reactStandard Approach
Platform SupportNot specifiedLimited / Varies
Context Awareness High Baseline
Installation ComplexityUnknownN/A

Frequently Asked Questions

What does this skill do?

Practical patterns for using fp-ts with React - hooks, state, forms, data fetching. Use when building React apps with functional programming patterns. Works with React 18/19, Next.js 14/15.

Where can I find the source code?

You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.

SKILL.md Source

# Functional Programming in React

Practical patterns for React apps. No jargon, just code that works.

## When to Use This Skill

- When building React apps with fp-ts for type-safe state management
- When handling loading/error/success states in data fetching
- When implementing form validation with error accumulation
- When using React 18/19 or Next.js 14/15 with functional patterns

---

## Quick Reference

| Pattern | Use When |
|---------|----------|
| `Option` | Value might be missing (user not loaded yet) |
| `Either` | Operation might fail (form validation) |
| `TaskEither` | Async operation might fail (API calls) |
| `RemoteData` | Need to show loading/error/success states |
| `pipe` | Chaining multiple transformations |

---

## 1. State with Option (Maybe It's There, Maybe Not)

Use `Option` instead of `null | undefined` for clearer intent.

### Basic Pattern

```typescript
import { useState } from 'react'
import * as O from 'fp-ts/Option'
import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function'

interface User {
  id: string
  name: string
  email: string
}

function UserProfile() {
  // Option says "this might not exist yet"
  const [user, setUser] = useState<O.Option<User>>(O.none)

  const handleLogin = (userData: User) => {
    setUser(O.some(userData))
  }

  const handleLogout = () => {
    setUser(O.none)
  }

  return pipe(
    user,
    O.match(
      // When there's no user
      () => <button onClick={() => handleLogin({ id: '1', name: 'Alice', email: 'alice@example.com' })}>
        Log In
      </button>,
      // When there's a user
      (u) => (
        <div>
          <p>Welcome, {u.name}!</p>
          <button onClick={handleLogout}>Log Out</button>
        </div>
      )
    )
  )
}
```

### Chaining Optional Values

```typescript
import * as O from 'fp-ts/Option'
import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function'

interface Profile {
  user: O.Option<{
    name: string
    settings: O.Option<{
      theme: string
    }>
  }>
}

function getTheme(profile: Profile): string {
  return pipe(
    profile.user,
    O.flatMap(u => u.settings),
    O.map(s => s.theme),
    O.getOrElse(() => 'light') // default
  )
}
```

---

## 2. Form Validation with Either

Either is perfect for validation: `Left` = errors, `Right` = valid data.

### Simple Form Validation

```typescript
import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either'
import * as A from 'fp-ts/Array'
import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function'

// Validation functions return Either<ErrorMessage, ValidValue>
const validateEmail = (email: string): E.Either<string, string> =>
  email.includes('@')
    ? E.right(email)
    : E.left('Invalid email address')

const validatePassword = (password: string): E.Either<string, string> =>
  password.length >= 8
    ? E.right(password)
    : E.left('Password must be at least 8 characters')

const validateName = (name: string): E.Either<string, string> =>
  name.trim().length > 0
    ? E.right(name.trim())
    : E.left('Name is required')
```

### Collecting All Errors (Not Just First One)

```typescript
import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either'
import { sequenceS } from 'fp-ts/Apply'
import { getSemigroup } from 'fp-ts/NonEmptyArray'
import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function'

// This collects ALL errors, not just the first one
const validateAll = sequenceS(E.getApplicativeValidation(getSemigroup<string>()))

interface SignupForm {
  name: string
  email: string
  password: string
}

interface ValidatedForm {
  name: string
  email: string
  password: string
}

function validateForm(form: SignupForm): E.Either<string[], ValidatedForm> {
  return pipe(
    validateAll({
      name: pipe(validateName(form.name), E.mapLeft(e => [e])),
      email: pipe(validateEmail(form.email), E.mapLeft(e => [e])),
      password: pipe(validatePassword(form.password), E.mapLeft(e => [e])),
    })
  )
}

// Usage in component
function SignupForm() {
  const [form, setForm] = useState({ name: '', email: '', password: '' })
  const [errors, setErrors] = useState<string[]>([])

  const handleSubmit = () => {
    pipe(
      validateForm(form),
      E.match(
        (errs) => setErrors(errs),     // Show all errors
        (valid) => {
          setErrors([])
          submitToServer(valid)         // Submit valid data
        }
      )
    )
  }

  return (
    <form onSubmit={e => { e.preventDefault(); handleSubmit() }}>
      <input
        value={form.name}
        onChange={e => setForm(f => ({ ...f, name: e.target.value }))}
        placeholder="Name"
      />
      <input
        value={form.email}
        onChange={e => setForm(f => ({ ...f, email: e.target.value }))}
        placeholder="Email"
      />
      <input
        type="password"
        value={form.password}
        onChange={e => setForm(f => ({ ...f, password: e.target.value }))}
        placeholder="Password"
      />

      {errors.length > 0 && (
        <ul style={{ color: 'red' }}>
          {errors.map((err, i) => <li key={i}>{err}</li>)}
        </ul>
      )}

      <button type="submit">Sign Up</button>
    </form>
  )
}
```

### Field-Level Errors (Better UX)

```typescript
type FieldErrors = Partial<Record<keyof SignupForm, string>>

function validateFormWithFieldErrors(form: SignupForm): E.Either<FieldErrors, ValidatedForm> {
  const errors: FieldErrors = {}

  pipe(validateName(form.name), E.mapLeft(e => { errors.name = e }))
  pipe(validateEmail(form.email), E.mapLeft(e => { errors.email = e }))
  pipe(validatePassword(form.password), E.mapLeft(e => { errors.password = e }))

  return Object.keys(errors).length > 0
    ? E.left(errors)
    : E.right({ name: form.name.trim(), email: form.email, password: form.password })
}

// In component
{errors.email && <span className="error">{errors.email}</span>}
```

---

## 3. Data Fetching with TaskEither

TaskEither = async operation that might fail. Perfect for API calls.

### Basic Fetch Hook

```typescript
import { useState, useEffect } from 'react'
import * as TE from 'fp-ts/TaskEither'
import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either'
import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function'

// Wrap fetch in TaskEither
const fetchJson = <T>(url: string): TE.TaskEither<Error, T> =>
  TE.tryCatch(
    async () => {
      const res = await fetch(url)
      if (!res.ok) throw new Error(`HTTP ${res.status}`)
      return res.json()
    },
    (err) => err instanceof Error ? err : new Error(String(err))
  )

// Custom hook
function useFetch<T>(url: string) {
  const [data, setData] = useState<T | null>(null)
  const [error, setError] = useState<Error | null>(null)
  const [loading, setLoading] = useState(true)

  useEffect(() => {
    setLoading(true)
    setError(null)

    pipe(
      fetchJson<T>(url),
      TE.match(
        (err) => {
          setError(err)
          setLoading(false)
        },
        (result) => {
          setData(result)
          setLoading(false)
        }
      )
    )()
  }, [url])

  return { data, error, loading }
}

// Usage
function UserList() {
  const { data, error, loading } = useFetch<User[]>('/api/users')

  if (loading) return <div>Loading...</div>
  if (error) return <div>Error: {error.message}</div>
  return (
    <ul>
      {data?.map(user => <li key={user.id}>{user.name}</li>)}
    </ul>
  )
}
```

### Chaining API Calls

```typescript
// Fetch user, then fetch their posts
const fetchUserWithPosts = (userId: string) => pipe(
  fetchJson<User>(`/api/users/${userId}`),
  TE.flatMap(user => pipe(
    fetchJson<Post[]>(`/api/users/${userId}/posts`),
    TE.map(posts => ({ ...user, posts }))
  ))
)
```

### Parallel API Calls

```typescript
import { sequenceT } from 'fp-ts/Apply'

// Fetch multiple things at once
const fetchDashboardData = () => pipe(
  sequenceT(TE.ApplyPar)(
    fetchJson<User>('/api/user'),
    fetchJson<Stats>('/api/stats'),
    fetchJson<Notifications[]>('/api/notifications')
  ),
  TE.map(([user, stats, notifications]) => ({
    user,
    stats,
    notifications
  }))
)
```

---

## 4. RemoteData Pattern (The Right Way to Handle Async State)

Stop using `{ data, loading, error }` booleans. Use a proper state machine.

### The Pattern

```typescript
// RemoteData has exactly 4 states - no impossible combinations
type RemoteData<E, A> =
  | { _tag: 'NotAsked' }                    // Haven't started yet
  | { _tag: 'Loading' }                     // In progress
  | { _tag: 'Failure'; error: E }           // Failed
  | { _tag: 'Success'; data: A }            // Got it!

// Constructors
const notAsked = <E, A>(): RemoteData<E, A> => ({ _tag: 'NotAsked' })
const loading = <E, A>(): RemoteData<E, A> => ({ _tag: 'Loading' })
const failure = <E, A>(error: E): RemoteData<E, A> => ({ _tag: 'Failure', error })
const success = <E, A>(data: A): RemoteData<E, A> => ({ _tag: 'Success', data })

// Pattern match all states
function fold<E, A, R>(
  rd: RemoteData<E, A>,
  onNotAsked: () => R,
  onLoading: () => R,
  onFailure: (e: E) => R,
  onSuccess: (a: A) => R
): R {
  switch (rd._tag) {
    case 'NotAsked': return onNotAsked()
    case 'Loading': return onLoading()
    case 'Failure': return onFailure(rd.error)
    case 'Success': return onSuccess(rd.data)
  }
}
```

### Hook with RemoteData

```typescript
function useRemoteData<T>(fetchFn: () => Promise<T>) {
  const [state, setState] = useState<RemoteData<Error, T>>(notAsked())

  const execute = async () => {
    setState(loading())
    try {
      const data = await fetchFn()
      setState(success(data))
    } catch (err) {
      setState(failure(err instanceof Error ? err : new Error(String(err))))
    }
  }

  return { state, execute }
}

// Usage
function UserProfile({ userId }: { userId: string }) {
  const { state, execute } = useRemoteData(() =>
    fetch(`/api/users/${userId}`).then(r => r.json())
  )

  useEffect(() => { execute() }, [userId])

  return fold(
    state,
    () => <button onClick={execute}>Load User</button>,
    () => <Spinner />,
    (err) => <ErrorMessage message={err.message} onRetry={execute} />,
    (user) => <UserCard user={user} />
  )
}
```

### Why RemoteData Beats Booleans

```typescript
// ❌ BAD: Impossible states are possible
interface BadState {
  data: User | null
  loading: boolean
  error: Error | null
}
// Can have: { data: user, loading: true, error: someError } - what does that mean?!

// ✅ GOOD: Only valid states exist
type GoodState = RemoteData<Error, User>
// Can only be: NotAsked | Loading | Failure | Success
```

---

## 5. Referential Stability (Preventing Re-renders)

fp-ts values like `O.some(1)` create new objects each render. React sees them as "changed".

### The Problem

```typescript
// ❌ BAD: Creates new Option every render
function BadComponent() {
  const [value, setValue] = useState(O.some(1))

  useEffect(() => {
    // This runs EVERY render because O.some(1) !== O.some(1)
    console.log('value changed')
  }, [value])
}
```

### Solution 1: useMemo

```typescript
// ✅ GOOD: Memoize Option creation
function GoodComponent() {
  const [rawValue, setRawValue] = useState<number | null>(1)

  const value = useMemo(
    () => O.fromNullable(rawValue),
    [rawValue]  // Only recreate when rawValue changes
  )

  useEffect(() => {
    // Now this only runs when rawValue actually changes
    console.log('value changed')
  }, [rawValue])  // Depend on raw value, not Option
}
```

### Solution 2: fp-ts-react-stable-hooks

```bash
npm install fp-ts-react-stable-hooks
```

```typescript
import { useStableO, useStableEffect } from 'fp-ts-react-stable-hooks'
import * as O from 'fp-ts/Option'
import * as Eq from 'fp-ts/Eq'

function StableComponent() {
  // Uses fp-ts equality instead of reference equality
  const [value, setValue] = useStableO(O.some(1))

  // Effect that understands Option equality
  useStableEffect(
    () => { console.log('value changed') },
    [value],
    Eq.tuple(O.getEq(Eq.eqNumber))  // Custom equality
  )
}
```

---

## 6. Dependency Injection with Context

Use ReaderTaskEither for testable components with injected dependencies.

### Setup Dependencies

```typescript
import * as RTE from 'fp-ts/ReaderTaskEither'
import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function'
import { createContext, useContext, ReactNode } from 'react'

// Define what services your app needs
interface AppDependencies {
  api: {
    getUser: (id: string) => Promise<User>
    updateUser: (id: string, data: Partial<User>) => Promise<User>
  }
  analytics: {
    track: (event: string, data?: object) => void
  }
}

// Create context
const DepsContext = createContext<AppDependencies | null>(null)

// Provider
function AppProvider({ deps, children }: { deps: AppDependencies; children: ReactNode }) {
  return <DepsContext.Provider value={deps}>{children}</DepsContext.Provider>
}

// Hook to use dependencies
function useDeps(): AppDependencies {
  const deps = useContext(DepsContext)
  if (!deps) throw new Error('Missing AppProvider')
  return deps
}
```

### Use in Components

```typescript
function UserProfile({ userId }: { userId: string }) {
  const { api, analytics } = useDeps()
  const [user, setUser] = useState<RemoteData<Error, User>>(notAsked())

  useEffect(() => {
    setUser(loading())
    api.getUser(userId)
      .then(u => {
        setUser(success(u))
        analytics.track('user_viewed', { userId })
      })
      .catch(e => setUser(failure(e)))
  }, [userId, api, analytics])

  // render...
}
```

### Testing with Mock Dependencies

```typescript
const mockDeps: AppDependencies = {
  api: {
    getUser: jest.fn().mockResolvedValue({ id: '1', name: 'Test User' }),
    updateUser: jest.fn().mockResolvedValue({ id: '1', name: 'Updated' }),
  },
  analytics: {
    track: jest.fn(),
  },
}

test('loads user on mount', async () => {
  render(
    <AppProvider deps={mockDeps}>
      <UserProfile userId="1" />
    </AppProvider>
  )

  await screen.findByText('Test User')
  expect(mockDeps.api.getUser).toHaveBeenCalledWith('1')
})
```

---

## 7. React 19 Patterns

### use() for Promises (React 19+)

```typescript
import { use, Suspense } from 'react'

// Instead of useEffect + useState for data fetching
function UserProfile({ userPromise }: { userPromise: Promise<User> }) {
  const user = use(userPromise)  // Suspends until resolved
  return <div>{user.name}</div>
}

// Parent provides the promise
function App() {
  const userPromise = fetchUser('1')  // Start fetching immediately

  return (
    <Suspense fallback={<Spinner />}>
      <UserProfile userPromise={userPromise} />
    </Suspense>
  )
}
```

### useActionState for Forms (React 19+)

```typescript
import { useActionState } from 'react'
import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either'

interface FormState {
  errors: string[]
  success: boolean
}

async function submitForm(
  prevState: FormState,
  formData: FormData
): Promise<FormState> {
  const data = {
    email: formData.get('email') as string,
    password: formData.get('password') as string,
  }

  // Use Either for validation
  const result = pipe(
    validateForm(data),
    E.match(
      (errors) => ({ errors, success: false }),
      async (valid) => {
        await saveToServer(valid)
        return { errors: [], success: true }
      }
    )
  )

  return result
}

function SignupForm() {
  const [state, formAction, isPending] = useActionState(submitForm, {
    errors: [],
    success: false
  })

  return (
    <form action={formAction}>
      <input name="email" type="email" />
      <input name="password" type="password" />

      {state.errors.map(e => <p key={e} className="error">{e}</p>)}

      <button disabled={isPending}>
        {isPending ? 'Submitting...' : 'Sign Up'}
      </button>
    </form>
  )
}
```

### useOptimistic for Instant Feedback (React 19+)

```typescript
import { useOptimistic } from 'react'

function TodoList({ todos }: { todos: Todo[] }) {
  const [optimisticTodos, addOptimisticTodo] = useOptimistic(
    todos,
    (state, newTodo: Todo) => [...state, { ...newTodo, pending: true }]
  )

  const addTodo = async (text: string) => {
    const newTodo = { id: crypto.randomUUID(), text, done: false }

    // Immediately show in UI
    addOptimisticTodo(newTodo)

    // Actually save (will reconcile when done)
    await saveTodo(newTodo)
  }

  return (
    <ul>
      {optimisticTodos.map(todo => (
        <li key={todo.id} style={{ opacity: todo.pending ? 0.5 : 1 }}>
          {todo.text}
        </li>
      ))}
    </ul>
  )
}
```

---

## 8. Common Patterns Cheat Sheet

### Render Based on Option

```typescript
// Pattern 1: match
pipe(
  maybeUser,
  O.match(
    () => <LoginButton />,
    (user) => <UserMenu user={user} />
  )
)

// Pattern 2: fold (same as match)
O.fold(
  () => <LoginButton />,
  (user) => <UserMenu user={user} />
)(maybeUser)

// Pattern 3: getOrElse for simple defaults
const name = pipe(
  maybeUser,
  O.map(u => u.name),
  O.getOrElse(() => 'Guest')
)
```

### Render Based on Either

```typescript
pipe(
  validationResult,
  E.match(
    (errors) => <ErrorList errors={errors} />,
    (data) => <SuccessMessage data={data} />
  )
)
```

### Safe Array Rendering

```typescript
import * as A from 'fp-ts/Array'

// Get first item safely
const firstUser = pipe(
  users,
  A.head,
  O.map(user => <Featured user={user} />),
  O.getOrElse(() => <NoFeaturedUser />)
)

// Find specific item
const adminUser = pipe(
  users,
  A.findFirst(u => u.role === 'admin'),
  O.map(admin => <AdminBadge user={admin} />),
  O.toNullable  // or O.getOrElse(() => null)
)
```

### Conditional Props

```typescript
// Add props only if value exists
const modalProps = {
  isOpen: true,
  ...pipe(
    maybeTitle,
    O.map(title => ({ title })),
    O.getOrElse(() => ({}))
  )
}
```

---

## When to Use What

| Situation | Use |
|-----------|-----|
| Value might not exist | `Option<T>` |
| Operation might fail (sync) | `Either<E, A>` |
| Async operation might fail | `TaskEither<E, A>` |
| Need loading/error/success UI | `RemoteData<E, A>` |
| Form with multiple validations | `Either` with validation applicative |
| Dependency injection | Context + `ReaderTaskEither` |
| Prevent re-renders with fp-ts | `useMemo` or `fp-ts-react-stable-hooks` |

---

## Libraries

- **[fp-ts](https://github.com/gcanti/fp-ts)** - Core library
- **[fp-ts-react-stable-hooks](https://github.com/mblink/fp-ts-react-stable-hooks)** - Stable hooks
- **[@devexperts/remote-data-ts](https://github.com/devexperts/remote-data-ts)** - RemoteData
- **[io-ts](https://github.com/gcanti/io-ts)** - Runtime type validation
- **[zod](https://github.com/colinhacks/zod)** - Schema validation (works great with fp-ts)

Related Skills

react-ui-patterns

30
from Zidong-IA/BIBLIOTECA

Modern React UI patterns for loading states, error handling, and data fetching. Use when building UI components, handling async data, or managing UI states.

react-state-management

30
from Zidong-IA/BIBLIOTECA

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.

react-patterns

30
from Zidong-IA/BIBLIOTECA

Modern React patterns and principles. Hooks, composition, performance, TypeScript best practices.

react-nextjs-development

30
from Zidong-IA/BIBLIOTECA

React and Next.js 14+ application development with App Router, Server Components, TypeScript, Tailwind CSS, and modern frontend patterns.

react-modernization

30
from Zidong-IA/BIBLIOTECA

Upgrade React applications to latest versions, migrate from class components to hooks, and adopt concurrent features. Use when modernizing React codebases, migrating to React Hooks, or upgrading to...

react-flow-node-ts

30
from Zidong-IA/BIBLIOTECA

Create React Flow node components with TypeScript types, handles, and Zustand integration. Use when building custom nodes for React Flow canvas, creating visual workflow editors, or implementing no...

react-flow-architect

30
from Zidong-IA/BIBLIOTECA

Expert ReactFlow architect for building interactive graph applications with hierarchical node-edge systems, performance optimization, and auto-layout integration. Use when Claude needs to create or...

react-best-practices

30
from Zidong-IA/BIBLIOTECA

React and Next.js performance optimization guidelines from Vercel Engineering. This skill should be used when writing, reviewing, or refactoring React/Next.js code to ensure optimal performance pat...

react-native-architecture

30
from Zidong-IA/BIBLIOTECA

Build production React Native apps with Expo, navigation, native modules, offline sync, and cross-platform patterns. Use when developing mobile apps, implementing native integrations, or architecti...

firecrawl

30
from Zidong-IA/BIBLIOTECA

Official Firecrawl CLI skill for web scraping, search, crawling, and browser automation. Returns clean LLM-optimized markdown. USE FOR: - Web search and research - Scraping pages, docs, and articles - Site mapping and bulk content extraction - Browser automation for interactive pages Must be pre-installed and authenticated. See rules/install.md for setup, rules/security.md for output handling.

super-search

30
from Zidong-IA/BIBLIOTECA

Search your coding memory. Use when user asks about past work, previous sessions, how something was implemented, what they worked on before, or wants to recall information from earlier sessions.

super-save

30
from Zidong-IA/BIBLIOTECA

Save important project knowledge to memory. Use when user wants to preserve architectural decisions, significant bug fixes, design patterns, or important implementation details for team reference.