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Named hooks: MVP support #16474
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Comment by @Jessidhia bvaughn/react-devtools-experimental#323 (comment) One thing that The problem is that This could potentially break with strange setups like the |
Comment by @audiolion bvaughn/react-devtools-experimental#323 (comment) This is really well thought-out! I think my issue with the I believe adding an -arity argument to the original react provided hooks to name them, and then a Then docs can reference: const [count, setCount] = React.useState(0, { name: 'count' }); and people will catch on that the name is for debugging purposes in the DevTools. |
Comment by @sompylasar bvaughn/react-devtools-experimental#323 (comment)
For custom hooks it will naturally build a stack:
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Comment by @audiolion bvaughn/react-devtools-experimental#323 (comment) After some more thought, if we did have a |
This useDebugName hook would be very useful. Any time there are a few useState hooks within a component it gets very hard to efficiently debug. Any update on this or any suggestion for a workaround? |
So, what's the decision? Are there any hook names in the plans, and if so, what way will be chosen and is there a specific date or version number? |
There is no decision on this. If there were, that info would be on the issue. |
FYI: i found an workaround for state with label at stack overflow https://stackoverflow.com/a/58579953/1930509 const [item, setItem] = useStateWithLabel(2, "item"); function useStateWithLabel(initialValue, name) {
const [value, setValue] = useState(initialValue);
useDebugValue(`${name}: ${value}`);
return [value, setValue];
} |
Just reading about useDebugValue on react docs and they don't recommend it with every custom hook. Maybe it's expensive? Would that then mean that you should use useStateWithLabel with caution? |
I think is a workaround if you see the code for code with useDebugValue it is only available in Dev mode otherwise an noOp: react/packages/react/src/ReactHooks.js Lines 140 to 148 in 6c00c5b
|
Hi! With named hooks, wouldn't be useful to be able to filter to find currently components that are using a specific custom hook on searchbar? I came to this issue after searching if it is somehow implemented. My use case is: I'm trying Relay Hooks (experimental) I could do this faster if I could go to the page and filter components that are using |
Any chance we could revive this? Moving to react from vue and this is a majorly annoying part of working with react dev tools vs vue. Personally prefer an additional param on useState to not clog up my code, but whatever works honestly. |
This is a minor detail but some of this is alleviated by simply doing. function useMyHook(initialValue) {
return React.useState(initialValue)
}
function MyComponent() {
const [value, setValue] = useMyHook(0)
return "..."
} The developer tools will display this as a If you have a really big and complex component this might not be possible to do but you probably want to break down that big complex component into something smaller anyway... |
+1 just starting to use react hooks and encountered this issue which makes debugging much harder than classes, I guess I'll stick with classes for now for most of my works until this is solved. |
In my hooks I just do
This way they show up in the dev tools with names. Then when you want to update you can do
|
Got a screenshot to show this in action? |
Looks like this in the dev tools |
All hooks, not just the state hook, would benefit from some mechanism to display the underlying values in dev tools. Generally I agree it'd be best to inspect the actual values these hooks produce in source maps or the like but if we really want to name these hooks in dev tools, we should be able to opt into declaring named functions instead of anonymous arrow functions. |
DevTools already does this for all built-in hooks. The example you show above contains custom hooks ( |
Without giving away the entire business logic, this is what the useMemo's are in my example (which they themselves are within a custom hook, which is what the
If there's a way to name the reference to that hook by using a named function I'm not seeing it work. Of course for all I know I might not be on a recent enough version of dev tools This is what I've tried, that wasn't working:
|
I think you're conflating things now. This issue is strictly about showing names for built-in hooks. The previous comment (the one I was replying to) was about showing values for built-in hooks. DevTools already does the latter (and supports a solution for custom hooks too). Showing names for built in hooks isn't supported yet. That's why this issue is open. 😄 We have a work in progress solution but it's not finished yet. |
sorry, you're right, I did conflate the term name and value - I was intending to stick to the original topic; the only reason I even commented was because there were previous comments insinuating that topic wasn't receiving attention and wanted to 👍 that there's an appetite for this still without risking this issue going stale. By the way, thanks for all you do to make the web a better place for everyone 😄 |
Check out this PR for work in progress on this: It hasn't been dropped or forgotten. We're just a small team so we have to prioritize larger efforts like this fairly aggressively. |
Closed via #21641 Note that, initially, this feature is only enabled for internal builds of the extension. I'd like to get people trying the feature out and reporting bugs for a bit before I release it to the larger browser stores. Worth keeping in mind that this feature can be slow for large apps, which is why it's off by default, but the follow up task #21782 should hopefully help with this. comet-named-hooks-slow-Kapture.2021-07-01.at.13.53.47.mp4 |
Hello @bvaughn , sorry for writing into closed issue but what should I change in my React code for this to work? Cause I've done the thing you showed in gif(video) but it didn't work, no names appeared. I'm using webpack 5 with typescipt and babel. |
@MetaMmodern Share a repro? |
@bvaughn And what I see in react tools: Do I need to share my weback config? |
@MetaMmodern Need a full repro that I can run. Screenshots don't help. |
Ok, that will take some time to create, I'll ping you here in a couple of days or on weekend then) |
Actually, there is a thing that could be relevant here: If your Webpack is using one of the cheap eval map variants, we don't support that b'c we can't load the underlying source code. (The source URL given is something like We could only access this if we used internal browser APIs via the "debugger" permission, but that permission is not something we'll want to add to DevTools. It's super powerful, and as a counter balance to that, Chrome shows a banner that says something like, "an extension is currently controlling your browser". |
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Well, for devtool I use |
Just tried |
Yes, anything with "eval" doesn't work. If you're using inline, it should work. Le'ts get a repro :) |
Note this issue is outdated. The current thinking is that the alternative, "load source code (with source maps) and parse for name", is probably the best course of action.
The problem
One common piece of feedback about DevTools hooks integration is that hooks have no name and can be confusing. Consider the following example:
Currently in DevTools the above component would be displayed as follows:
This information isn't as rich as we would prefer.☹️
The next question is often: "can you use the name of the variable the hook return value is assigned to?" but this is tricky because DevTools doesn't actually have any way to access that variable. (Even if DevTools has a handle on the
Example
function above, how would it access theuseSomeCustomHook
function?)The proposal
The solution to this would be some form of user-defined metadata (preferably generated by a code transform). Building on the precedent of the
useDebugValue
hook (#14559), we might introduce a new no-op hook e.g.useDebugName
.The above example could make use of this hook like so:
DevTools could then display something like:
Implementation details
The new
useDebugName
hook might be a noop hook provided by React (similar touseDebugValue
) or it could even be an export from the (soon to be releasedreact-debug-hooks
package). The key concerns would be that:DevTools could override the no-op
useDebugName
implementation before inspecting a component and automatically associate the provided name with the most recently called native hook.For example, the following code should only result in one named hook (the second
useState
call).Being able to support sparse name metadata would be important for third party code (that might not be transformed to supply the metadata).
A code transform would be ideal for this scenario because manual annotation would probably be cumbersome. This could also be marketed as a DEV-only transform so as not to bloat production bundles with display names. We might even try to detect the env and throw if it isn't DEV (like #15939).
Further considerations
Custom hooks?
In some cases, custom hooks might also be ambiguous. Consider the
useSubscription
hook (#15022):Currently in DevTools the above component would be displayed as follows:
Maybe the value alone (provided by
useDebugValue
) could be enough to uniquely identify the hook, but I suspect in many cases it might not be sufficient. Should we then useuseDebugName
for custom hooks as well?I think it would be more fragile given the way our custom hooks detection logic is implemented. Custom hooks are not identified until after a component has finished rendering. In order for us to associate names with custom hooks, we would need to maintain a stack of names. This could lead to potential mismatches though in the event that
useDebugName
was called more (or fewer) times than there are custom hooks.For example, consider the following code:
The proposed implementation of
useDebugName
would be robust enough to handle naming "foo" and "baz" states and leaving "bar" as anonymous state hook. If we were maintaining a stack of names however, this discrepency would be more difficult to manage.Perhaps there is a clever solution to this problem. I would probably suggest leaving it out of the initial implementation though and only revisiting if we determine it's a necessary feature.
Alternatives considered
Pass debug name as an additional (unused) parameter
An alternative approach to calling a separate hook for naming purposes would be to pass the display name as an additional parameter to the native hook, e.g.:
Pros:
Cons:
useReducer
has optional parameters that the transform (or manual code) would need to be aware of to avoid a runtime error.Load source code (with source maps) and parse for name
We could use an extension API like
Resource.getContent
to load the source code (including custom hooks) and parse it determine the hook/variable names. Essentially this would work like the proposed transform above, but at runtime.Pros:
Cons:
Call
toString
on the function component and parse for nameA possible 80/20 variant of the above proposal would be to simply call
toString
on the function component and parse any top-level hooks.Pros:
Cons:
Use a Babel transform to leave an inline comment (and call
toString
to search for it)Rather than inserting a call to a new custom hook, our code transform could just insert an inline comment with the name. We could then parse the code to find the inline comment, e.g.:
Pros:
Cons:
Originally reported via bvaughn/react-devtools-experimental#323
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