Ubisoft Connect is a multi-platform ecosystem of player services and the go-to destination for your Ubisoft games. It aims at providing the best gaming environment for players to enjoy their games and connect with each other, no matter the device.
Apple has discontinued the technology that enables Spotify to control volume for connected devices. While we work with them on a solution, users can adjust the volume using the slider in the Connect menu when connected to a device.
The returns of mapStateToProps and mapDispatchToProps are referred to internally as stateProps and dispatchProps, respectively. They will be supplied to mergeProps, if defined, as the first and the second argument, where the third argument will be ownProps. The combined result, commonly referred to as mergedProps, will then be supplied to your connected component.
A mapStateToProps function takes a maximum of two parameters. The number of declared function parameters (a.k.a. arity) affects when it will be called. This also determines whether the function will receive ownProps. See notes here.
If your mapStateToProps function is declared as taking two parameters, it will be called whenever the store state changes or when the wrapper component receives new props (based on shallow equality comparisons). It will be given the store state as the first parameter, and the wrapper component's props as the second parameter.
Your mapStateToProps functions are expected to return an object. This object, normally referred to as stateProps, will be merged as props to your connected component. If you define mergeProps, it will be supplied as the first parameter to mergeProps.
You may define mapStateToProps and mapDispatchToProps as a factory function, i.e., you return a function instead of an object. In this case your returned function will be treated as the real mapStateToProps or mapDispatchToProps, and be called in subsequent calls. You may see notes on Factory Functions or our guide on performance optimizations.
If your mapDispatchToProps function is declared as taking two parameters, it will be called with dispatch as the first parameter and the props passed to the wrapper component as the second parameter, and will be re-invoked whenever the connected component receives new props.
The return of your mapDispatchToProps functions are regarded as dispatchProps. It will be merged as props to your connected component. If you define mergeProps, it will be supplied as the second parameter to mergeProps.
In this case, React-Redux binds the dispatch of your store to each of the action creators using bindActionCreators. The result will be regarded as dispatchProps, which will be either directly merged to your connected components, or supplied to mergeProps as the second argument.
If specified, defines how the final props for your own wrapped component are determined. If you do not provide mergeProps, your wrapped component receives ...ownProps, ...stateProps, ...dispatchProps by default.
The fields in the plain object you return from it will be used as the props for the wrapped component. You may specify this function to select a slice of the state based on props, or to bind action creators to a particular variable from props.
React-Redux v6 allows you to supply a custom context instance to be used by React-Redux.You need to pass the instance of your context to both and your connected component.You may pass the context to your connected component either by passing it here as a field of option, or as a prop to your connected component in rendering.
You may wish to override areStatesEqual if your mapStateToProps function is computationally expensive and is also only concerned with a small slice of your state. The example above will effectively ignore state changes for everything but that slice of state. Additionally, areStatesEqual provides nextOwnProps and prevOwnProps to allow for more effective scoping of your state which your connected component is interested in, if needed.
You may wish to override areOwnPropsEqual as a way to whitelist incoming props. You'd also have to implement mapStateToProps, mapDispatchToProps and mergeProps to also whitelist props. (It may be simpler to achieve this other ways, for example by using recompose's mapProps.)
You may wish to override areStatePropsEqual to use strictEqual if your mapStateToProps uses a memoized selector that will only return a new object if a relevant prop has changed. This would be a very slight performance improvement, since would avoid extra equality checks on individual props each time mapStateToProps is called.
You may wish to override areMergedPropsEqual to implement a deepEqual if your selectors produce complex props. ex: nested objects, new arrays, etc. (The deep equal check may be faster than just re-rendering.)
Note: ownProps is not passed to mapStateToProps and mapDispatchToProps if the formal definition of the function contains one mandatory parameter (function has length 1). For example, functions defined like below won't receive ownProps as the second argument. If the incoming value of ownProps is undefined, the default argument value will be used.
If your mapStateToProps or mapDispatchToProps functions return a function, they will be called once when the component instantiates, and their returns will be used as the actual mapStateToProps, mapDispatchToProps, functions respectively, in their subsequent calls.
Have you or your family been affected by COVID-19? You can get help from a local care coordinator in your community by contacting Care Connect Washington at 1-833-453-0336. The care coordinator will spend time understanding your needs and then help you and your whole family connect to available resources such as housing, health insurance, child care, food assistance programs, and other kinds of services. The services available differ by area.
Care Connect Washington is a program developed early in the pandemic to provide food and other support to people with COVID-19 so they could isolate at home. Now the program is helping meet the longer-term needs of people who have been affected by COVID-19. For example, some people experience long-term side effects from COVID-19. Other people may have been sick and lost their job and need help getting back on their feet. Care Connect Washington can help.
Care Connect Washington is a partnership between the Department of Health, nine regional hubs, and more than 100 local care coordinators in communities across the state. The Care Connect system strengthens communities by helping people achieve stability and better health. Local care coordinators work with a person to help them apply for programs such as unemployment benefits, subsidized housing or child care, food assistance programs such as SNAP or WIC, Apple Health, and more. Care Connect provides the information people need in their preferred language.
Your local care coordinator will spend time getting to know you and understanding your needs. Then they will identify local resources available to support you, including health care, subsidized housing or child care, unemployment benefits, food assistance, and more. Services will vary by region. Care Connect Washington will provide the information you need in your preferred language. Care Connect services are available at no cost.
Your care coordinator will confirm the information they get from the call center and ask about your needs. Any information you share with your care coordinator remains confidential. The employees who provide care coordination services and the Department of Health will use the information to identify essential services that you may need. They will not share personal or private health information.
Advertisers want access to data and insights, but nothing is more valuable than your relationship with your audience. Connect brings you future-proofed revenue opportunities, while maintaining the highest level of security and respect for user privacy. Connect combines platform technology and dedicated service to enhance how inventory and data are packaged and transacted.
Increase your data sales by connecting with premium publishers and marketers committed to better strategies to reach their target audiences across all digital environments. Connect drives value through continuous enhancement and innovation, keeping you ahead of the pack with future-proofed tools and opportunities.
You need to be in prime position to take advantage of market moves. When attention, budgets, and plans shift, we keep you ahead of the game. Connect gives you a near real-time view of your data deals, performance insights, and metrics to optimize your revenue stream.
Kia Connect technology opens another level to your Kia by providing access to remote features and services that truly enhance your ownership experience like lock/unlock, climate control, charging, Find My Car, stolen vehicle recovery, and much, much more!
Remotely start your engine, adjust climate, and view detailed vehicle information all in the palm of your hand. When you pair your smartwatch to a mobile device with the Kia Access App, you'll be able to send remote commands from there as well.
About to head out? Heat or cool your car to the perfect temperature before you leave! Using the Kia Access app, set the temperature remotely so you won't have to endure a sweltering seat or icy interior again.
Get an alert if you forget Fido in the second or third row. The seats have sensors designed to detect movement after the doors have been locked. Through the Kia Access app, you can even get an alert on your smartphone!
Uh oh. Did you forget to lock the car? Even if you're miles away, you won't need to worry when you can lock and unlock from your smartphone. And, if you lock your keys in the car, you can handle it in seconds.
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