In this section, we will learn the difference between the component life cycle methods that we used on class components and the new React effects. Even if you have read in other places that they are the same, just with a different syntax, this is not correct.
Understanding useEffect
When you work with useEffect, you need to think in effects. If you want to perform the equivalent method of componentDidMount using useEffect, you can do the following:
useEffect(() => {
// Here you perform your side effect
}, [])
The first parameter is the callback of the effect that you want to execute, and the second parameter is the dependencies array. If you pass an empty array ([]) on the dependencies, the state and props will have their original initial values.
However, it is important to mention that even though this is the closest equivalent for componentDidMount, it does not have the same behavior. Unlike componentDidMount and componentDidUpdate, the function that...