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Should you default to memo?
You might have faced slow renders in react application? When such a situation happens we find ourselves inclined to use React.memo
or useMemo
.
Consider the following code sample:
import React, { useState } from "react";
// [App.js]
function App() {
const [name, setName] = useState('');
return (
<div>
<input
type="text"
value={name}
onChange={(e) => setName(e.target.value)}
/>
<SlowSubtree />
</div>
);
}
function SlowSubtree() {
sleep(500); // try increasing time here đź’Ł
return <p>Artifically Slow subtree</p>;
}
// [utils.js]
function sleep(time) {
const exitAt = Date.now() + time;
while (exitAt > Date.now()) {
// simulate expensive subtree
}
}
In the code example, we have artificially simulated an expensive sub-tree with <SlowSubtree />
component. Which gets re-rendered on a change in input. As we type in input we set the name
state thus causing a re-render of App
component, which then renders <SlowSubtree />
. The quick fix here is wrapping SlowSubtree
component in a React.memo
as shown below:
import React, { memo } from "react";
// [App.js]
function SlowSubtreeComponent() {
sleep(500);
return <p>Artifically Slow subtree</p>
}
const SlowSubtree = memo(SlowSubtreeComponent);
React.memo()
is a quick fix but can we avoid using it? Following are some approaches:
In the example, we are setting the name
state with every keystroke and causing re-rendering each time input changes, setting the state on every keystroke is wastage here. What we can do is we can debounce set state calls to prevent rendering with each keystroke. I consider this as a bit of a hacky approach but I’ve put this here to bring this to your notice.
import React, {
useState,
useMemo,
useLayoutEffect,
useRef
} from "react";
// [App.js]
function App() {
const [name, setName] = useState('');
const debounceOnChange = useDebounceFn(
(e) => setName(e.target.value)
);
return (
<div>
<input
type="text"
onChange={debounceOnChange} />
<SlowSubtree />
</div>
);
}
function SlowSubtree() {
sleep(500); // try increasing time here đź’Ł
return <p>Artifically Slow subtree</p>;
}
// [utils.js]
function sleep(time) {
const exitAt = Date.now() + time;
while (exitAt > Date.now()) {
// simulate expensive subtree
}
}
// [hooks.js]
import debounce from "lodash.debounce";
function useDebounceFn(callbackFn, delay = 500) {
const callbackFnRef = useRef(callbackFn);
useLayoutEffect(() => {
callbackFnRef.current = callbackFn;
});
return useMemo(
() =>
debounce((...args) =>callbackFnRef.current(...args), delay),
[delay]
);
}
Note that the SlowSubtree
the component renders because of a state change in the parent component. The changing part here is name
state with <input/>
while SlowSubtree
is not changing. We can split and move state down in its separate component like shown below:
import React, { useState } from "react";
// [App.js]
function App() {
const [name, setName] = useState('');
return (
<div>
<NameInput />
<SlowSubtree />
</div>
);
}
function NameInput() {
const [name, setName] = useState('');
return (
<input
type="text"
value={name}
onChange={(e) => setName(e.target.value)}
/>
);
}
function SlowSubtree() {
sleep(500); // try increasing time here đź’Ł
return <p>Artifically Slow subtree</p>;
}
// [utils.js]
function sleep(time) {
const exitAt = Date.now() + time;
while (exitAt > Date.now()) {
// simulate expensive subtree
}
}
It is not required to move the state down in its own NameInput
component we can also move the state up and leverage a pattern called render as child.
This pattern is very similar to the render props approach but instead of passing components to a render prop, we use props.children
instead. Here we will lift the state up in its own component and wrap SlowSubtree
component with it.
import React, { useState } from "react";
// [App.js]
function App() {
return (
<NameComponent>
<SlowSubtree />
</NameComponent>
);
}
function NameComponent(props) {
const [name, setName] = useState('');
return (
<div>
<input
type="text"
value={name}
onChange={(e) => setName(e.target.value)}
/>
{props.children}
</div>
);
}
function SlowSubtree() {
sleep(500); // try increasing time here đź’Ł
return <p>Artifically Slow subtree</p>;
}
// [utils.js]
function sleep(time) {
const exitAt = Date.now() + time;
while (exitAt > Date.now()) {
// simulate expensive subtree
}
}
When name
state changed NameComponent
re-render but as it still gets the same children
prop as last time so React doesn’t need to visit SlowSubtree
subtree. And as a result <SlowSubtree />
doesn’t re-render.
I have personally used this approach many times to prevent the re-rendering of child subtree. This pattern is used in layout components where the wrapper decided the layout and styles of its children. For example Material-UI Card component.
Before you use a React.memo()
or useMemo()
again you should stop and think to see if you can split part that changes from the parts that don’t change. So take into account if state relocation can help before you settle with the memo.
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