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React 18 Design Patterns and Best Practices - Fourth Edition

You're reading from  React 18 Design Patterns and Best Practices - Fourth Edition

Product type Book
Published in Jul 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803233109
Pages 524 pages
Edition 4th Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Carlos Santana Roldán Carlos Santana Roldán
Profile icon Carlos Santana Roldán
Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters close

Preface 1. Taking Your First Steps with React 2. Introducing TypeScript 3. Cleaning Up Your Code 4. Exploring Popular Composition Patterns 5. Writing Code for the Browser 6. Making Your Components Look Beautiful 7. Anti-Patterns to Be Avoided 8. React Hooks 9. React Router 10. React 18 New Features 11. Managing Data 12. Server-Side Rendering 13. Understanding GraphQL with a Real Project 14. MonoRepo Architecture 15. Improving the Performance of Your Applications 16. Testing and Debugging 17. Deploying to Production 18. Other Books You May Enjoy
19. Index

Tools and libraries

In the next section, we will go through several techniques, tools, and libraries that we can apply to our code base to monitor and improve performance.

Immutability

The new React Hooks, such as React.memo, use a shallow comparison method against the props, which means that if we pass an object as a prop and we mutate one of its values, we do not get the expected behavior.

In fact, a shallow comparison cannot find mutation on the properties and the components never get re-rendered, except when the object itself changes. One way to solve this issue is by using immutable data, data that, once it gets created, cannot be mutated.

For example, we can set the state in the following mode:

const [state, setState] = useState({})
const obj = state.obj
obj.foo = 'bar'
setState({ obj })

Even if the value of the foo attribute of the object is changed, the reference to the object is still the same and the shallow comparison does not recognize...

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