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πŸ‹ It's react's useEffect hook, except using deep comparison on the inputs, not reference equality

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use-deep-compare-effect πŸ‹

It's React's useEffect hook, except using deep comparison on the inputs, not reference equality


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WARNING: Please only use this if you really can't find a way to use React.useEffect. There's often a better way to do what you're trying to do than a deep comparison.

The Problem

React's built-in useEffect hook has a second argument called the "dependencies array" and it allows you to optimize when React will call your effect callback. React will do a comparison between each of the values (via Object.is) to determine whether your effect callback should be called.

The problem is that if you need to provide an object for one of those dependencies and that object is new every render, then even if none of the properties changed, your effect will get called anyway.

Table of Contents

Installation

This module is distributed via npm which is bundled with node and should be installed as one of your project's dependencies:

npm install --save use-deep-compare-effect

Usage

You use it in place of React.useEffect.

NOTE: Only use this if your values are objects or arrays that contain objects. Otherwise, you should just use React.useEffect. In case of "polymorphic" values (eg: sometimes object, sometimes a boolean), use useDeepCompareEffectNoCheck, but do it at your own risk, as maybe there can be better approaches to the problem.

NOTE: Be careful when your dependency is an object which contains function. If that function is defined on the object during a render, then it's changed and the effect callback will be called every render. Issue has more context.

Example:

import React from 'react'
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom'
import useDeepCompareEffect from 'use-deep-compare-effect'

function Query({query, variables}) {
  // some code...

  useDeepCompareEffect(
    () => {
      // make an HTTP request or whatever with the query and variables
      // optionally return a cleanup function if necessary
    },
    // query is a string, but variables is an object. With the way Query is used
    // in the example above, `variables` will be a new object every render.
    // useDeepCompareEffect will do a deep comparison and your callback is only
    // run when the variables object actually has changes.
    [query, variables],
  )

  return <div>{/* awesome UI here */}</div>
}

Other Solutions

use-custom-compare-effect

Issues

Looking to contribute? Look for the Good First Issue label.

πŸ› Bugs

Please file an issue for bugs, missing documentation, or unexpected behavior.

See Bugs

πŸ’‘ Feature Requests

Please file an issue to suggest new features. Vote on feature requests by adding a πŸ‘. This helps maintainers prioritize what to work on.

See Feature Requests

Contributors ✨

Thanks goes to these people (emoji key):


Kent C. Dodds

πŸ’» πŸ“– πŸš‡ ⚠️

Edygar de Lima Oliveira

πŸ’» ⚠️

Justin Dorfman

πŸ”

Anton Halim

πŸ“–

MichaΓ«l De Boey

πŸ’»

Tobias BΓΌschel

πŸ“–

Peter HozΓ‘k

πŸ‘€

Ricardo Busquet

πŸ‘€

Dave Johansen

πŸ›

Sam Knutson

πŸ“–

Albert Lucianto

πŸ› πŸ’» ⚠️

Jasper Chang

πŸ“–

cvolant

πŸ’»

Phoebe Gao

πŸ’»

Andrew Blakey

πŸ“–

This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!

LICENSE

MIT

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πŸ‹ It's react's useEffect hook, except using deep comparison on the inputs, not reference equality

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