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React 17 Design Patterns and Best Practices

You're reading from   React 17 Design Patterns and Best Practices Design, build, and deploy production-ready web applications using industry-standard practices

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800560444
Length 394 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Hello React!
2. Taking Your First Steps with React FREE CHAPTER 3. Cleaning Up Your Code 4. How React Works
5. React Hooks 6. Exploring Popular Composition Patterns 7. Understanding GraphQL with a Real Project 8. Managing Data 9. Writing Code for the Browser 10. Performance, Improvements, and Production!
11. Making Your Components Look Beautiful 12. Server-Side Rendering for Fun and Profit 13. Improving the Performance of Your Applications 14. Testing and Debugging 15. React Router 16. Anti-Patterns to Be Avoided 17. Deploying to Production 18. Next Steps 19. About Packt 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Introducing React Suspense with SWR

React Suspense was introduced in React 16.6. Right now (April 2021) this feature is still experimental and you should not use it in your production applications. Suspense lets you suspend component rendering until a condition is met. You can render a loading component or anything you want as a fallback of Suspense. Right now there are only two use cases for this:

  • Code splitting: When you split your application and you're waiting to download a chunk of your app when a user wants to access it
  • Data fetching: When you're fetching data

In both scenarios, you can render a fallback, which can normally be a loading spinner, some loading text, or even better, a placeholder skeleton.

WARNING: The new React Suspense feature is still experimental so I recommend you do not use it on production because it is not yet available in a stable release.

Introducing SWR

Stale-While-Revalidate (SWR) is a React Hook for data fetching; it is an HTTP cache invalidation...

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