Important: This documentation covers Yarn 1 (Classic).
For Yarn 2+ docs and migration guide, see yarnpkg.com.

Package detail

@matiasbontempo/tiny-flags

matiasbontempo12MITdeprecated1.2.0TypeScript support: included

WARNING: This package is now deprecated and will no longer receive updates. Please use the new package tiny-flags instead.

What is this? Feature flags for ants? Well yes! But also Tiny Flags is simple way to add client-side feature flags that can be updated at runtime.

feature, flags, toggles, toggle, react, tiny-flags, tiny flags, feature flag, feature flags, feature toggle, feature toggles, feature flagging, feature toggling, feature management, react hooks, react hook, react components, react component, react library, react feature flag, react feature flags, react feature toggle, react feature toggles, react feature flagging, react feature toggling, react feature management, react tiny flags, react tiny-flags, chrome extension, web extension, extension companion

readme

Tiny Flags

🚩 What is this? Feature flags for ants?

Well, yes! Antiny 🐜 looks super happy with it. But also it is a simple way to add client-side feature flags that can be updated at runtime using a companion browser extension.

Let PMs, designers, fellow developers or even clients try your awesome new features without worrying about waiting for the whole thing to be finished or blocking a release.

Tiny Flags is a great option when you don't want to pay for a third-party provider. Every user of your application can update the flags' status without the need of re-deploying, allowing them to test in a real environment.

This project also provides full TypeScript support when using the useFlags hook.

🪄 Demo

Want to see it in action? Check out the demo.

Also, you can check this CodeSandbox to play with the code.

📦 Installation

npm i @matiasbontempo/tiny-flags

🧑‍💻 Usage

First, you'll need a configuration:

// tiny-flags.ts

import { createTinyFlags } from 'tiny-flags';

const flags = {
  newFeature: {
    label: 'New Feature',
    value: false, // value is not required
  },
  anotherFlag: {
    label: 'This is another feature enabled by default',
    value: true,
  },
};

export const { FlagsProvider, useFlags } = createTinyFlags(flags);

Then you can wrap your application with FlagsProvider.

import ReactDOM from 'react-dom/client';
import App from './App';

import { FlagsProvider } from './tiny-flags';

ReactDOM.render(
  <React.StrictMode>
    <FlagsProvider><App /></FlagsProvider>
  </React.StrictMode>,
  document.getElementById('root')
)

Finally, import useFlags in your components to check your flag's status.

// component.ts

import { useFlags } from './tiny-flags';

const App = () => {
  const flags = useFlags();

  return (
    <div>
      This will show if
      { flags.newFeature && <div>Ta-da! 🎉</div> }
    </div>
  );
};

export default App;

Make sure to import FlagsProvider and useFlags from the tiny-flags configuration file and not the tiny-flags package.

🧩 Extension

This library establishes a two-way communication with the Tiny Flags Extension so you can see the available flags and also toggle their state.

Extension

⚠️ When not to use?

  • You need to remotely update your flags
  • You need complex rules or different audiences for your flags
  • You don't want your flags to be exposed