I've been using object-oriented programming practices for 25 years and trying to move toward functional programming for the last 5 years, but my mind always goes towards OOP when I'm trying to do something complex and, especially now that ES6 supports decent OOP syntax, that's the natural way for me to build stuff.
I'm now learning Redux and I understand (c.f. How to put methods onto the objects in Redux state?) that it's a no-no to put class instances in your reducers; and the recommended method for computing on top of plain reducer state is by using selectors (e.g., via reselect). And, of course, React recommends composition over inheritance (https://facebook.github.io/react/docs/composition-vs-inheritance.html, React redux oop classes).
But is there any place in the React/Redux ecosystem for class objects with methods and inheritance?
I guess, to sort of answer my own question, OOP classes encourage the addition of data properties and operations on the data in the same place, which is nice for readability, but doesn't fit well with pure functions and immutable data.
If I was going to use OOP, would I need to chuck the idea of having my instances persist and maintain state for any amount of time? Like, every time I want to use one, I would instantiate it from store data, use whatever methods I want, and throw it away? That might obviate a lot of the impetus to use OOP classes. But if I keep instances around, I'll have headaches keeping them synced with the store.
So, is the answer to always use selectors when I'm tempted to use methods and always use composition when I'm tempted to use inheritance? Specifically, I mean when storing and manipulating data held in a Redux store for use in React components. And, if so, where should it fit in? Connected to selectors? Immediately disposable like I suggested?
Adding my use case for clarity: My data is basically a huge graph: lots of objects with lots of properties and lots of relationships between objects. It's read only, but complex. My objects are called "concepts".
Before making the (probably foolish) decision to migrate to Redux, I used classes to structure and represent concepts, sets of concepts, and relationships between concepts. My classes included async api logic to fetch concept sets, information about each concept, and information about other concepts that each concept is related to. If the user chose to drill down, the classes would recursively fetch and instantiate new concept sets. The Redux documentation recommends flat, normalized structures for nested data (http://redux.js.org/docs/recipes/reducers/NormalizingStateShape.html) which is probably wise for storage, but my OOP model was good for traversing sections of the graph and stuff. I have a hard time wrapping my head around using selectors and immutable state that might involve nesting, potentially with cycles, or needing to make async calls for more data.
I'm successfully using https://redux-observable.js.org/ for the api stuff.
Maybe @Sulthan's answer is right: I should feel free to use OOP techniques in my Redux application. But it still seems weird. I can't keep my objects around because if the store changes (more data is fetched, for instance), my objects can get stale. If my objects are nested but my store is normalized, I'll instantiate them (from selectors) when I need them and make sure not to keep them around...
I'll answer my own question by describing what I ended up doing, imperfect as it is.
First, instead of regular ES6 class syntax, I've started using stampit, which is uglier that ES6 classes, but much more flexible.
Mainly, though, my complex objects exist in two forms:
I use a convention of putting an _underscore in front of all references to the plain objects. My "solution" is kludgy and bad for lots of reasons, but I think trying to use selectors for everything would be worse. If you're curious, here's the place in my code where I "inflate" my plain store objects into instances: https://github.com/Sigfried/vocab-pop/blob/localstorage/src/ducks/conceptSet.js#L292
Turning redux state POJOs into class instances (regular or stampit) is a terrible idea and someone should have stopped me long ago.
I probably should have accepted @markerikson's answer, and maybe the Redux-ORM thing is worth looking at, but I just wanted to say definitively, DON'T DO WHAT I DID. (I always think I'm so smart filling in the "gaps" of technologies I'm learning with clever hacks -- and then I spend painful months cleaning up the mess once I understand why that technology didn't include my hack in the first place.)
From Composing Software: An Introduction:
What we won’t do is say that functional programming is better than object-oriented programming, or that you must choose one over the other. OOP vs FP is a false dichotomy. Every real Javascript application I’ve seen in recent years mixes FP and OOP extensively.
Looks like there are good ways to think about combining FP and OOP, and it will, no doubt, use some immutable classes and composition without a lot of inheritance. This series on composition looks like what I needed to learn.