Day 12:05 PMHyatt Regency Miami
react

What if useState() was your database?

Anselm Eickhoff

React's useState() can only be used for temporary, frontend state. To interact with important objects in your app, you usually have to query a backend and use state to hold results. In this talk we'll explore how sync engines and local-first databases give you global, persistent reactive state — as if you had a local plus cloud database that looked like useState(), without worrying about networking.