The problem is: Every time I click the button, I see "Button render" in the console. But I want to see this post only once
The problem is: Every time I click the button, I see "Button render" in the console. But I want to see this post only once
import React, { useState, useCallback } from "react";
import Button from "./Button";
const UseCallback = () => {
const [count, setCount] = useState(0);
const handleClick = useCallback(() => {
setCount((prevState) => prevState + 1);
}, []);
return (
<div>
<p>{count}</p>
<Button
deneme={{ aaa: "aaa", bbb: "bbb" }}
handleClick={handleClick}
></Button>
</div>
);
};
export default UseCallback;
import React from "react";
const Button = ({ handleClick }) => {
console.log("Button - rerender");
return (
<div>
<button onClick={handleClick}>Sayacı artır</button>
</div>
);
};
export default React.memo(Button);
It is suppose to re-render since the callback is changing on render and you are passing a new object reference on each render to button. You already have React.memo but since you have a new object reference every time it's a re-rendering button.
Try wrapping object in useMemo to keep the same reference or create a variable at top and pass it in deneme prop
const UseCallback = () => {
const [count, setCount] = useState(0);
const handleClick = useCallback(() => {
setCount((prevState) => prevState + 1);
}, []);
const deneme = useMemo(() => {
return { aaa: "aaa", bbb: "bbb" };
}, []);
return (
<div>
<p>{count}</p>
<Button deneme={deneme} handleClick={handleClick}></Button>
</div>
);
};
or
const deneme = {
aaa: "aaa",
bbb: "bbb"
};
const UseCallback = () => {
const [count, setCount] = useState(0);
const handleClick = useCallback(() => {
setCount((prevState) => prevState + 1);
}, []);
return (
<div>
<p>{count}</p>
<Button handleClick={handleClick}></Button>
</div>
);
};
So only thing you are missing is to pass a compareFunction which will tell React.Memo exact condition when to rerender the component. You can see your code working here.
https://codesandbox.io/s/romantic-cherry-bv5y0?file=/src/App.js
import "./styles.css";
import React, { useState, useCallback } from "react";
const Button1 = ({ handleClick }) => {
console.log("Button - rerender");
return (
<div>
<button onClick={handleClick}>Sayacı artır</button>
</div>
);
};
const compareFunction = (prevProps, nextProps) => {
return true; //As props only have a function which we are sure doesn't change.
};
const Button = React.memo(Button1, compareFunction);
const UseCallback = () => {
const [count, setCount] = useState(0);
const handleClick = useCallback(() => {
setCount((prevState) => prevState + 1);
}, []);
return (
<div>
<p>{count}</p>
<Button
deneme={{ aaa: "aaa", bbb: "bbb" }}
handleClick={handleClick}
></Button>
</div>
);
};
export default UseCallback;
I am using usePreviousValue custom hook to get previous props value from my component:
const usePreviousValue = value => {
const ref = useRef();
useEffect(() => {
ref.current = value;
});
return ref.current;
};
const MyComponent = ({ count }) => {
const prevCount = usePreviousValue(count)
return (<div> {count} | {prevCount}</div>)
}
But in this case, in prevCount I always have only the first count prop value when a component was rendered, and the next updated prop value is never assigned to it. Are there any ways to properly compare nextProp and prevProp with functional React components?
Your code sample seems to be working just fine. How exactly are you using the component? Try to run the snippet below:
const { useEffect, useRef, useState } = React;
const usePreviousValue = value => {
const ref = useRef();
useEffect(() => {
ref.current = value;
});
return ref.current;
};
const MyComponent = ({ count }) => {
const prevCount = usePreviousValue(count);
return (<div> {count} | {prevCount}</div>);
}
function App() {
const [count, setCount] = useState(0);
return (
<div>
<MyComponent count={count} />
<button
onClick={() => setCount((prevCount) => prevCount + 1)}
>
Count++
</button>
</div>
);
}
ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.body);
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/16.8.4/umd/react.production.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react-dom/16.8.4/umd/react-dom.production.min.js"></script>
As previously answered, the easiest way to do it is using a custom hook:
import isEqual from "lodash/isEqual";
import { useEffect, useRef } from "react";
const useComponentDidUpdate = (callback, data, checkIfIsEqual) => {
const prevData = useRef(data);
useEffect(() => {
const isTheSame = checkIfIsEqual ? isEqual(data, prevData) : undefined;
callback(prevData.current, isTheSame);
prevData.current = data;
}, [data]);
return null;
};
export default useComponentDidUpdate;
Then in your component:
const Component = ({age})=>{
const [state, setState] = useState({name: 'John', age})
useComponentDidUpdate(prevStateAndProps=>{
if(prevStateAndProps.age !== age || prevStateAndProps.state.name !== state.name){
// do something
}
}, {state, age})
...
}
I am creating a stopwatch in React.js and i am wondering why window.addEventListener('keydown', callback) re-render my component?
import { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
import './App.scss';
import Timer from './Timer';
import Button from './Button';
import Time from './Time';
const App = () => {
const [isRunning, setIsRunning] = useState(false);
const [start, setStart] = useState(new Time(0));
const [stop, setStop] = useState(new Time(0));
const handleStart = () => {
const now = new Date();
setIsRunning(true);
setStart(new Time(now));
setStop(new Time(now));
};
const handleStop = () => {
setIsRunning(false);
setStop(new Time(new Date()));
};
const getTime = () => {
if (isRunning) {
return new Time(new Date().getTime() - start.origin);
} else {
return new Time(stop.origin - start.origin);
}
};
const handleKeyDown = (key) => {
console.log(key.code === 'Space');
};
useEffect(() => {
window.addEventListener('keydown', handleKeyDown);
return () => {
window.removeEventListener('keydown', handleKeyDown);
};
});
return (
<div className="stopwatch">
<Timer getTime={getTime} />
<div className="buttons">
<Button role={'start'} callback={handleStart} />
<Button role={'stop'} callback={handleStop} />
</div>
</div>
);
};
export default App;
When i click start and then stop after let's say 3s. <Timer /> show correctly time that has passed, but then when i press Space on keyboard <Timer /> is re-rendering, showing new time. Then, when i switch my web-browser to VSCode and again to web-browser, <Timer /> isn't re-rendering
Here is my Timer component
import { memo, useEffect, useRef } from 'react';
const Timer = ({ getTime }) => {
const timer = useRef();
console.log('timer rendered');
useEffect(() => {
function run() {
const time = getTime().formatted();
timer.current.textContent = `${time.m}:${time.s}.${time.ms}`;
requestAnimationFrame(run);
}
run();
return () => {
cancelAnimationFrame(run);
};
});
return <div ref={timer} className="timer"></div>;
};
export default memo(Timer);
no matter if I use [] in both or none of useEffect nothing changes.
As #davood-falahati says, adding an empty array as a second argument to useEffect would probably be desirable. From the docs:
... If you want to run an effect and clean it up only once (on mount and unmount), you can pass an empty array ([]) as a second argument. This tells React that your effect doesn’t depend on any values from props or state, so it never needs to re-run. This isn’t handled as a special case — it follows directly from how the dependencies array always works. ...
In your use case:
useEffect(() => {
window.addEventListener('keydown', handleKeyDown);
return () => {
window.removeEventListener('keydown', handleKeyDown);
};
}, []);
I am trying to compare old and new state values using custom hook usePrevious made with useRef hook where state consists of array of objects.
While printing the old value and current value, it returns current values in both cases, but when it's just the array of numbers or if it's the first render, it works well.
Also, https://codesandbox.io/s/4c4ie is the code for the test.
Is there any mistake I have done or there is something else to do to get old state and current state?
Below is the code I am using.
import React from 'react'
function usePrevious(value) {
const ref = React.useRef();
React.useEffect(() => {
ref.current = value;
});
return ref.current;
}
function Playground() {
const [state, setState] = React.useState([{ value: 0 }]);
const prevState = usePrevious(state);
React.useEffect(() => {
console.log(prevState, state)
if (prevState !== state) {
try {
console.log(prevState[0].value)
console.log(state[0].value)
} catch (e) {
}
}
}, [JSON.stringify(state)])
// }, [state])
const _onClick = () => {
const tempState = [...state];
tempState[0].value = state[0].value + 1;
setState(tempState)
}
return (
<div>
<div>prevStateValue: {prevState ? prevState[0].value : 'undefined'}</div>
<div>stateValue: {state[0].value}</div>
<button onClick={_onClick}>click</button>
</div>
)
}
export default Playground
You were mutating state with: tempState[0].value = state[0].value + 1;
Here is a working snippet:
function usePrevious(value) {
const ref = React.useRef();
React.useEffect(() => {
ref.current = value;
},[value]);//only set when value changed
return ref.current;
}
function App() {
const [state, setState] = React.useState([{ value: 0 }]);
const prevState = usePrevious(state);
React.useEffect(() => {
if (prevState !== state) {
try {
console.log(
'pref',
prevState[0].value,
'current',
state[0].value
);
} catch (e) {
console.log('not set yet');
}
}
}, [prevState, state]);
// }, [state])
const _onClick = () => {
const tempState = [...state];
//you were mutating state here
tempState[0] = {
...tempState[0],
value: tempState[0].value + 1,
};
setState(tempState);
};
return (
<div>
<div>
prevStateValue:{' '}
{prevState ? prevState[0].value : 'undefined'}
</div>
<div>stateValue: {state[0].value}</div>
<button onClick={_onClick}>click</button>
</div>
);
}
ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById('root'));
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/16.8.4/umd/react.production.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react-dom/16.8.4/umd/react-dom.production.min.js"></script>
<div id="root"></div>
You are passing the reference of state to ref instead of the value. Cloning the object before assigning to ref.current will help.
function usePrevious(value) {
const ref = React.useRef();
React.useEffect(() => {
ref.current = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(value));
});
return ref.current;
}
According to the docs:
componentDidUpdate() is invoked immediately after updating occurs. This method is not called for the initial render.
We can use the new useEffect() hook to simulate componentDidUpdate(), but it seems like useEffect() is being ran after every render, even the first time. How do I get it to not run on initial render?
As you can see in the example below, componentDidUpdateFunction is printed during the initial render but componentDidUpdateClass was not printed during the initial render.
function ComponentDidUpdateFunction() {
const [count, setCount] = React.useState(0);
React.useEffect(() => {
console.log("componentDidUpdateFunction");
});
return (
<div>
<p>componentDidUpdateFunction: {count} times</p>
<button
onClick={() => {
setCount(count + 1);
}}
>
Click Me
</button>
</div>
);
}
class ComponentDidUpdateClass extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
count: 0,
};
}
componentDidUpdate() {
console.log("componentDidUpdateClass");
}
render() {
return (
<div>
<p>componentDidUpdateClass: {this.state.count} times</p>
<button
onClick={() => {
this.setState({ count: this.state.count + 1 });
}}
>
Click Me
</button>
</div>
);
}
}
ReactDOM.render(
<div>
<ComponentDidUpdateFunction />
<ComponentDidUpdateClass />
</div>,
document.querySelector("#app")
);
<script src="https://unpkg.com/react#16.7.0-alpha.0/umd/react.development.js"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/react-dom#16.7.0-alpha.0/umd/react-dom.development.js"></script>
<div id="app"></div>
We can use the useRef hook to store any mutable value we like, so we could use that to keep track of if it's the first time the useEffect function is being run.
If we want the effect to run in the same phase that componentDidUpdate does, we can use useLayoutEffect instead.
Example
const { useState, useRef, useLayoutEffect } = React;
function ComponentDidUpdateFunction() {
const [count, setCount] = useState(0);
const firstUpdate = useRef(true);
useLayoutEffect(() => {
if (firstUpdate.current) {
firstUpdate.current = false;
return;
}
console.log("componentDidUpdateFunction");
});
return (
<div>
<p>componentDidUpdateFunction: {count} times</p>
<button
onClick={() => {
setCount(count + 1);
}}
>
Click Me
</button>
</div>
);
}
ReactDOM.render(
<ComponentDidUpdateFunction />,
document.getElementById("app")
);
<script src="https://unpkg.com/react#16.7.0-alpha.0/umd/react.development.js"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/react-dom#16.7.0-alpha.0/umd/react-dom.development.js"></script>
<div id="app"></div>
You can turn it into custom hooks, like so:
import React, { useEffect, useRef } from 'react';
const useDidMountEffect = (func, deps) => {
const didMount = useRef(false);
useEffect(() => {
if (didMount.current) func();
else didMount.current = true;
}, deps);
}
export default useDidMountEffect;
Usage example:
import React, { useState, useEffect } from 'react';
import useDidMountEffect from '../path/to/useDidMountEffect';
const MyComponent = (props) => {
const [state, setState] = useState({
key: false
});
useEffect(() => {
// you know what is this, don't you?
}, []);
useDidMountEffect(() => {
// react please run me if 'key' changes, but not on initial render
}, [state.key]);
return (
<div>
...
</div>
);
}
// ...
I made a simple useFirstRender hook to handle cases like focussing a form input:
import { useRef, useEffect } from 'react';
export function useFirstRender() {
const firstRender = useRef(true);
useEffect(() => {
firstRender.current = false;
}, []);
return firstRender.current;
}
It starts out as true, then switches to false in the useEffect, which only runs once, and never again.
In your component, use it:
const firstRender = useFirstRender();
const phoneNumberRef = useRef(null);
useEffect(() => {
if (firstRender || errors.phoneNumber) {
phoneNumberRef.current.focus();
}
}, [firstRender, errors.phoneNumber]);
For your case, you would just use if (!firstRender) { ....
Same approach as Tholle's answer, but using useState instead of useRef.
const [skipCount, setSkipCount] = useState(true);
...
useEffect(() => {
if (skipCount) setSkipCount(false);
if (!skipCount) runYourFunction();
}, [dependencies])
EDIT
While this also works, it involves updating state which will cause your component to re-render. If all your component's useEffect calls (and also all of its children's) have a dependency array, this doesn't matter. But keep in mind that any useEffect without a dependency array (useEffect(() => {...}) will be run again.
Using and updating useRef will not cause any re-renders.
#ravi, yours doesn't call the passed-in unmount function. Here's a version that's a little more complete:
/**
* Identical to React.useEffect, except that it never runs on mount. This is
* the equivalent of the componentDidUpdate lifecycle function.
*
* #param {function:function} effect - A useEffect effect.
* #param {array} [dependencies] - useEffect dependency list.
*/
export const useEffectExceptOnMount = (effect, dependencies) => {
const mounted = React.useRef(false);
React.useEffect(() => {
if (mounted.current) {
const unmount = effect();
return () => unmount && unmount();
} else {
mounted.current = true;
}
}, dependencies);
// Reset on unmount for the next mount.
React.useEffect(() => {
return () => mounted.current = false;
}, []);
};
a simple way is to create a let, out of your component and set in to true.
then say if its true set it to false then return (stop) the useEffect function
like that:
import { useEffect} from 'react';
//your let must be out of component to avoid re-evaluation
let isFirst = true
function App() {
useEffect(() => {
if(isFirst){
isFirst = false
return
}
//your code that don't want to execute at first time
},[])
return (
<div>
<p>its simple huh...</p>
</div>
);
}
its Similar to #Carmine Tambasciabs solution but without using state :)
function useEffectAfterMount(effect, deps) {
const isMounted = useRef(false);
useEffect(() => {
if (isMounted.current) return effect();
else isMounted.current = true;
}, deps);
// reset on unmount; in React 18, components can mount again
useEffect(() => {
isMounted.current = false;
});
}
We need to return what comes back from effect(), because it might be a cleanup function. But we don't need to determine if it is or not. Just pass it on and let useEffect figure it out.
In an earlier version of this post I said resetting the ref (isMounted.current = false) wasn't necessary. But in React 18 it is, because components can remount with their previous state (thanks #Whatabrain).
I thought creating a custom hook would be overkill and I didn't want to muddle my component's readability by using the useLayoutEffect hook for something unrelated to layouts, so, in my case, I simply checked to see if the value of my stateful variable selectedItem that triggers the useEffect callback is its original value in order to determine if it's the initial render:
export default function MyComponent(props) {
const [selectedItem, setSelectedItem] = useState(null);
useEffect(() => {
if(!selectedItem) return; // If selected item is its initial value (null), don't continue
//... This will not happen on initial render
}, [selectedItem]);
// ...
}
This is the best implementation I've created so far using typescript. Basically, the idea is the same, using the Ref but I'm also considering the callback returned by useEffect to perform cleanup on component unmount.
import {
useRef,
EffectCallback,
DependencyList,
useEffect
} from 'react';
/**
* #param effect
* #param dependencies
*
*/
export default function useNoInitialEffect(
effect: EffectCallback,
dependencies?: DependencyList
) {
//Preserving the true by default as initial render cycle
const initialRender = useRef(true);
useEffect(() => {
let effectReturns: void | (() => void) = () => {};
// Updating the ref to false on the first render, causing
// subsequent render to execute the effect
if (initialRender.current) {
initialRender.current = false;
} else {
effectReturns = effect();
}
// Preserving and allowing the Destructor returned by the effect
// to execute on component unmount and perform cleanup if
// required.
if (effectReturns && typeof effectReturns === 'function') {
return effectReturns;
}
return undefined;
}, dependencies);
}
You can simply use it, as usual as you use the useEffect hook but this time, it won't run on the initial render. Here is how you can use this hook.
useNoInitialEffect(() => {
// perform something, returning callback is supported
}, [a, b]);
If you use ESLint and want to use the react-hooks/exhaustive-deps rule for this custom hook:
{
"rules": {
// ...
"react-hooks/exhaustive-deps": ["warn", {
"additionalHooks": "useNoInitialEffect"
}]
}
}
#MehdiDehghani, your solution work perfectly fine, one addition you have to do is on unmount, reset the didMount.current value to false. When to try to use this custom hook somewhere else, you don't get cache value.
import React, { useEffect, useRef } from 'react';
const useDidMountEffect = (func, deps) => {
const didMount = useRef(false);
useEffect(() => {
let unmount;
if (didMount.current) unmount = func();
else didMount.current = true;
return () => {
didMount.current = false;
unmount && unmount();
}
}, deps);
}
export default useDidMountEffect;
Simplified implementation
import { useRef, useEffect } from 'react';
function MyComp(props) {
const firstRender = useRef(true);
useEffect(() => {
if (firstRender.current) {
firstRender.current = false;
} else {
myProp = 'some val';
};
}, [props.myProp])
return (
<div>
...
</div>
)
}
You can use custom hook to run use effect after mount.
const useEffectAfterMount = (cb, dependencies) => {
const mounted = useRef(true);
useEffect(() => {
if (!mounted.current) {
return cb();
}
mounted.current = false;
}, dependencies); // eslint-disable-line react-hooks/exhaustive-deps
};
Here is the typescript version:
const useEffectAfterMount = (cb: EffectCallback, dependencies: DependencyList | undefined) => {
const mounted = useRef(true);
useEffect(() => {
if (!mounted.current) {
return cb();
}
mounted.current = false;
}, dependencies); // eslint-disable-line react-hooks/exhaustive-deps
};
For people who are having trouble with React 18 strict mode calling the useeffect on the initial render twice, try this:
// The init variable is necessary if your state is an object/array, because the == operator compares the references, not the actual values.
const init = [];
const [state, setState] = useState(init);
const dummyState = useRef(init);
useEffect(() => {
// Compare the old state with the new state
if (dummyState.current == state) {
// This means that the component is mounting
} else {
// This means that the component updated.
dummyState.current = state;
}
}, [state]);
Works in development mode...
function App() {
const init = [];
const [state, setState] = React.useState(init);
const dummyState = React.useRef(init);
React.useEffect(() => {
if (dummyState.current == state) {
console.log('mount');
} else {
console.log('update');
dummyState.current = state;
}
}, [state]);
return (
<button onClick={() => setState([...state, Math.random()])}>Update state </button>
);
}
ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById("app")).render(
<React.StrictMode>
<App />
</React.StrictMode>
);
<script crossorigin src="https://unpkg.com/react#18/umd/react.development.js"></script>
<script crossorigin src="https://unpkg.com/react-dom#18/umd/react-dom.development.js"></script>
<div id="app"></div>
And in production.
function App() {
const init = [];
const [state, setState] = React.useState(init);
const dummyState = React.useRef(init);
React.useEffect(() => {
if (dummyState.current == state) {
console.log('mount');
} else {
console.log('update');
dummyState.current = state;
}
}, [state]);
return (
<button onClick={() => setState([...state, Math.random()])}>Update state </button>
);
}
ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById("app")).render(
<React.StrictMode>
<App />
</React.StrictMode>
);
<script crossorigin src="https://unpkg.com/react#18/umd/react.production.min.js"></script>
<script crossorigin src="https://unpkg.com/react-dom#18/umd/react-dom.production.min.js"></script>
<div id="app"></div>
If you want to skip the first render, you can create a state "firstRenderDone" and set it to true in the useEffect with empty dependecy list (that works like a didMount). Then, in your other useEffect, you can check if the first render was already done before doing something.
const [firstRenderDone, setFirstRenderDone] = useState(false);
//useEffect with empty dependecy list (that works like a componentDidMount)
useEffect(() => {
setFirstRenderDone(true);
}, []);
// your other useEffect (that works as componetDidUpdate)
useEffect(() => {
if(firstRenderDone){
console.log("componentDidUpdateFunction");
}
}, [firstRenderDone]);
All previous are good, but this can be achieved in a simplier way considering that the action in useEffect can be "skipped" placing an if condition(or any other ) that is basically not run first time, and still with the dependency.
For example I had the case of :
Load data from an API but my title has to be "Loading" till the date were not there, so I have an array, tours that is empty at beginning and show the text "Showing"
Have a component rendered with different information from those API.
The user can delete one by one those info, even all making the tour array empty again as the beginning but this time the API fetch is been already done
Once the tour list is empty by deleting then show another title.
so my "solution" was to create another useState to create a boolean value that change only after the data fetch making another condition in useEffect true in order to run another function that also depend on the tour length.
useEffect(() => {
if (isTitle) {
changeTitle(newTitle)
}else{
isSetTitle(true)
}
}, [tours])
here my App.js
import React, { useState, useEffect } from 'react'
import Loading from './Loading'
import Tours from './Tours'
const url = 'API url'
let newTours
function App() {
const [loading, setLoading ] = useState(true)
const [tours, setTours] = useState([])
const [isTitle, isSetTitle] = useState(false)
const [title, setTitle] = useState("Our Tours")
const newTitle = "Tours are empty"
const removeTours = (id) => {
newTours = tours.filter(tour => ( tour.id !== id))
return setTours(newTours)
}
const changeTitle = (title) =>{
if(tours.length === 0 && loading === false){
setTitle(title)
}
}
const fetchTours = async () => {
setLoading(true)
try {
const response = await fetch(url)
const tours = await response.json()
setLoading(false)
setTours(tours)
}catch(error) {
setLoading(false)
console.log(error)
}
}
useEffect(()=>{
fetchTours()
},[])
useEffect(() => {
if (isTitle) {
changeTitle(newTitle)
}else{
isSetTitle(true)
}
}, [tours])
if(loading){
return (
<main>
<Loading />
</main>
)
}else{
return (
<main>
<Tours tours={tours} title={title} changeTitle={changeTitle}
removeTours={removeTours} />
</main>
)
}
}
export default App
const [dojob, setDojob] = useState(false);
yourfunction(){
setDojob(true);
}
useEffect(()=>{
if(dojob){
yourfunction();
setDojob(false);
}
},[dojob]);