State
A state describes the machine’s status or mode, which could be as simple as Paused and Playing. A state machine can only be in one state at a time.
These states are “finite”; the machine can only move through the states you’ve pre-defined.
State object
The state object represents the current state of a running machine (actor) and contains the following properties:
value
: the current state value, which is either:- a string representing a simple state like
'playing'
, or: - an object representing nested states like
{ paused: 'buffering' }
.
- a string representing a simple state like
context
: the current context (extended state.)meta
: an object containing state node meta data.
const feedbackMachine = createMachine({
id: 'feedback',
initial: 'question',
context: {
feedback: '',
},
states: {
question: {
meta: {
question: 'How was your experience?',
},
},
},
});
const actor = createActor(feedbackMachine);
actor.start();
console.log(actor.getSnapshot());
// Logs an object containing:
// {
// value: 'question',
// context: {
// feedback: ''
// },
// meta: {
// 'feedback.question': {
// question: 'How was your experience?'
// }
// }
// }
Accessing state snapshots
You can access an actor’s emitted state (or snapshot) by subscribing to or reading from the actor’s .getSnapshot()
method.
const actor = createActor(feedbackMachine);
actor.subscribe((snapshot) => {
console.log(snapshot);
// logs the current snapshot state, e.g.:
// { value: 'question', ... }
// { value: 'thanks', ... }
});
actor.start();
console.log(actor.getSnapshot());
// logs { value: 'question', ... }
State value
A state machine with nested states (or statechart) is a tree-like structure where each node is a state node. The root state node is the top-level state node that represents the entire machine. The root node may have child state nodes, which may have child state nodes, and so on.
The state value is an object that represents all the active state nodes in a machine. For state machines that have state nodes without child state nodes, the state value is a string:
Coming soon… a visual example.
state.value === 'question'
state.value === 'thanks'
state.value === 'closed'
For state machines with parent state nodes, the state value is an object:
Coming soon… a visual example.
state.value === { form: 'invalid' }
- this represents a state machine with an active child node with keyform
that has an active child node with keyinvalid
For state machines with parallel state nodes, the state value contains object(s) with multiple keys for each state node region:
state.value ===
{
monitor: 'on',
mode: 'dark',
};
State machines may also have no state nodes other than the root state node. For these state machines, the state value is null
.
State context
State machines can have context, which is an object that represents the extended state of the machine. The context is immutable, and can only be updated by assigning to it in an action. You can read the state.context
property to get the current context.
const currentState = feedbackActor.getSnapshot();
console.log(currentState.context);
// logs { feedback: '' }
- Object is empty
{}
(default) if context is not specified in the machine config - Never mutate this object; should be treated as immutable/read-only
State children
The state.children
property represents all currently spawned/invoked actors in the current state. It is an object with keys representing the actor IDs and values representing the ActorRef
instances.
- This is where you access spawned/invoked actors by their ID
- This is why you should give spawned/invoked actors IDs
- Stopped actors will not appear here
state.can(eventType)
The state.can(event)
method determines whether an event
object will cause a state change if sent to the machine actor. The method will return true
if the state will change due to the event
being sent; otherwise the method will return false
:
const feedbackMachine = createMachine({
// ...
states: {
form: {
// ...
on: {
'feedback.submit': {
guard: 'isValid',
target: 'thanks',
},
},
},
},
});
const feedbackActor = createActor(feedbackMachine).start();
// ...
const currentState = feedbackActor.getSnapshot();
console.log(currentState.can({ type: 'feedback.submit' }));
// logs `true` if the 'feedback.submit' event will cause a transition, which will occur if:
// - the current state is 'form'
// - the 'isValid' guard evaluates to `true`
A state is considered “changed” if a transition is enabled for the given state
and event
object.
state.hasTag(tag)
The state.hasTag(tag)
method determines whether any state nodes in the current state value have the given tag
. This is useful for determining whether a state is a particular state, or whether a state is a member of a particular state group.
const feedbackMachine = createMachine({
// ...
states: {
submitting: {
tags: ['loading'],
// ...
},
},
});
const feedbackActor = createActor(feedbackMachine).start();
const currentState = feedbackActor.getSnapshot();
const showLoadingSpinner = currentState.hasTag('loading');
Prefer using state.hasTag(tag)
over state.matches(stateValue)
, as state.hasTag(tag)
is more resilient to changes in the machine.
state.matches(stateValue)
The state.matches(stateValue)
method determines whether the current state.value
matches the given stateValue
. If the current state.value
is a "subset" of the provided stateValue
, then the method will return true
.
// state.value === 'question'
state.matches('question'); // true
// state.value === { form: 'invalid' }
state.matches('form'); // true
state.matches('question'); // false
state.matches({ form: 'invalid' }); // true
state.matches({ form: 'valid' }); // false
// state.value === { 'form submitting' : 'invalid value' }
state.matches('form submitting'); // true
state.matches('form'); // false
state.matches({ 'form submitting': 'invalid value' }); // true
state.matches({ 'form submitting': 'value' }); // false
state.output
The state.output
property represents the output data of a state machine when it is in its top-level final state; i.e., state.status === 'done'
.
const state = actor.getSnapshot();
if (state.status === 'done') {
console.log(state.output);
}
state.getMeta()
The state.getMeta()
method represents the metadata of all the state nodes in the state
. It is an object with keys that represent the state node IDs, and values that are the metadata of that state node.
const feedbackMachine = createMachine({
id: 'feedback',
// ...
states: {
form: {
meta: {
view: 'shortForm',
},
},
},
});
const feedbackActor = createActor(feedbackMachine).start();
// Assume the current state is 'form'
const currentState = feedbackActor.getSnapshot();
console.log(currentState.getMeta());
// logs { 'feedback.form': { view:'shortForm' } }
State descriptions
You can add .description
to states to describe their purpose and share related notes with your team. In Stately Studio’s editor, these descriptions are rendered in the machine and support markdown including links, images, and lists. Read more about descriptions in Stately Studio.
states: {
"Loading Move Destinations": {
description:
"Load data from the server based on the entity's id and type (project or machine). Result includes the entity's current location, and the list or tree of valid destination options to which the user may move that entity.",
invoke: {
src: "loadMoveData",
id: "loadMoveData",
onDone: [
{
target: "Destination Menu",
actions: "setDestinations",
},
],
onError: [
{
target: "Data Loading Error",
},
],
},
},
}
States and TypeScript
Coming soon
States cheatsheet
Cheatsheet: read or match a state value
const state = actor.getSnapshot();
const currentStateValue = state.value;
const isLoading = state.matches('loading');
Cheatsheet: read state context
console.log(state.context);
Cheatsheet: read state output
if (state.status === 'done') {
// Output may exist
console.log(state.output);
} else {
// Output does not exist
state.output === undefined;
}
Cheatsheet: read state meta data
console.log(state.getMeta());