React 18 supports all modern browsers (Edge, Firefox, Chrome, Safari, etc).
If you support older browsers and devices such as Internet Explorer which do not provide modern browser features natively or have non-compliant implementations, consider including a global polyfill in your bundled application.
Here is a list of the modern features React 18 uses:
The correct polyfill for these features depend on your environment. For many users, you can configure your Browserlist settings. For others, you may need to import polyfills like
core-js
directly.
A single-page application is an application that loads a single HTML page and all the necessary assets (such as JavaScript and CSS) required for the application to run. Any interactions with the page or subsequent pages do not require a round trip to the server which means the page is not reloaded.
Though you may build a single-page application in React, it is not a requirement. React can also be used for enhancing small parts of existing websites with additional interactivity. Code written in React can coexist peacefully with markup rendered on the server by something like PHP, or with other client-side libraries. In fact, this is exactly how React is being used at Facebook.
ES6, ES2015, ES2016, etc
These acronyms all refer to the most recent versions of the ECMAScript Language Specification standard, which the JavaScript language is an implementation of. The ES6 version (also known as ES2015) includes many additions to the previous versions such as: arrow functions, classes, template literals,
let
and
const
statements. You can learn more about specific versions here.
Compilers
A JavaScript compiler takes JavaScript code, transforms it and returns JavaScript code in a different format. The most common use case is to take ES6 syntax and transform it into syntax that older browsers are capable of interpreting. Babel is the compiler most commonly used with React.
Bundlers
Bundlers take JavaScript and CSS code written as separate modules (often hundreds of them), and combine them together into a few files better optimized for the browsers. Some bundlers commonly used in React applications include Webpack and Browserify.
Package Managers
Package managers are tools that allow you to manage dependencies in your project. npm and Yarn are two package managers commonly used in React applications. Both of them are clients for the same npm package registry.
CDN
CDN stands for Content Delivery Network. CDNs deliver cached, static content from a network of servers across the globe.
JSX
JSX is a syntax extension to JavaScript. It is similar to a template language, but it has full power of JavaScript. JSX gets compiled to
React.createElement()
calls which return plain JavaScript objects called “React elements”. To get a basic introduction to JSX see the docs here and find a more in-depth tutorial on JSX here.
React DOM uses camelCase property naming convention instead of HTML attribute names. For example,
tabindex
becomes
tabIndex
in JSX. The attribute
class
is also written as
className
since
class
is a reserved word in JavaScript:
<h1className="hello">My name is Clementine!</h1>
Elements
React elements are the building blocks of React applications. One might confuse elements with a more widely known concept of “components”. An element describes what you want to see on the screen. React elements are immutable.
const element =<h1>Hello, world</h1>;
Typically, elements are not used directly, but get returned from components.
Components
React components are small, reusable pieces of code that return a React element to be rendered to the page. The simplest version of React component is a plain JavaScript function that returns a React element:
Components can be broken down into distinct pieces of functionality and used within other components. Components can return other components, arrays, strings and numbers. A good rule of thumb is that if a part of your UI is used several times (Button, Panel, Avatar), or is complex enough on its own (App, FeedStory, Comment), it is a good candidate to be a reusable component. Component names should also always start with a capital letter (
<Wrapper/>
not
<wrapper/>
). See this documentation for more information on rendering components.
props
props
are inputs to a React component. They are data passed down from a parent component to a child component.
Remember that
props
are readonly. They should not be modified in any way:
// Wrong! props.number =42;
If you need to modify some value in response to user input or a network response, use
state
instead.
props.children
props.children
is available on every component. It contains the content between the opening and closing tags of a component. For example:
<Welcome>Hello world!</Welcome>
The string
Hello world!
is available in
props.children
in the
Welcome
component:
A component needs
state
when some data associated with it changes over time. For example, a
Checkbox
component might need
isChecked
in its state, and a
NewsFeed
component might want to keep track of
fetchedPosts
in its state.
The most important difference between
state
and
props
is that
props
are passed from a parent component, but
state
is managed by the component itself. A component cannot change its
props
, but it can change its
state
.
For each particular piece of changing data, there should be just one component that “owns” it in its state. Don’t try to synchronize states of two different components. Instead, lift it up to their closest shared ancestor, and pass it down as props to both of them.
Lifecycle Methods
Lifecycle methods are custom functionality that gets executed during the different phases of a component. There are methods available when the component gets created and inserted into the DOM (mounting), when the component updates, and when the component gets unmounted or removed from the DOM.
Controlled vs. Uncontrolled Components
React has two different approaches to dealing with form inputs.
An input form element whose value is controlled by React is called a
controlled component
. When a user enters data into a controlled component a change event handler is triggered and your code decides whether the input is valid (by re-rendering with the updated value). If you do not re-render then the form element will remain unchanged.
An
uncontrolled component
works like form elements do outside of React. When a user inputs data into a form field (an input box, dropdown, etc) the updated information is reflected without React needing to do anything. However, this also means that you can’t force the field to have a certain value.
In most cases you should use controlled components.
Keys
A “key” is a special string attribute you need to include when creating arrays of elements. Keys help React identify which items have changed, are added, or are removed. Keys should be given to the elements inside an array to give the elements a stable identity.
Keys only need to be unique among sibling elements in the same array. They don’t need to be unique across the whole application or even a single component.
Don’t pass something like
Math.random()
to keys. It is important that keys have a “stable identity” across re-renders so that React can determine when items are added, removed, or re-ordered. Ideally, keys should correspond to unique and stable identifiers coming from your data, such as
post.id
.
Refs
React supports a special attribute that you can attach to any component. The
ref
attribute can be an object created by
React.createRef()
function or a callback function, or a string (in legacy API). When the
ref
attribute is a callback function, the function receives the underlying DOM element or class instance (depending on the type of element) as its argument. This allows you to have direct access to the DOM element or component instance.
Use refs sparingly. If you find yourself often using refs to “make things happen” in your app, consider getting more familiar with top-down data flow.
Events
Handling events with React elements has some syntactic differences:
React event handlers are named using camelCase, rather than lowercase.
With JSX you pass a function as the event handler, rather than a string.
Reconciliation
When a component’s props or state change, React decides whether an actual DOM update is necessary by comparing the newly returned element with the previously rendered one. When they are not equal, React will update the DOM. This process is called “reconciliation”.
Hooks
are a new addition in React 16.8. They let you use state and other React features without writing a class.
import React,{ useState }from'react';
functionExample(){ // Declare a new state variable, which we'll call "count"const[count, setCount]=useState(0); return( <div> <p>You clicked {count} times</p> <buttononClick={()=>setCount(count +1)}> Click me </button> </div> ); }
This new function
useState
is the first “Hook” we’ll learn about, but this example is just a teaser. Don’t worry if it doesn’t make sense yet!
You can start learning Hooks
on the next page.
On this page, we’ll continue by explaining why we’re adding Hooks to React and how they can help you write great applications.
Note
React 16.8.0 is the first release to support Hooks. When upgrading, don’t forget to update all packages, including React DOM.
React Native has supported Hooks since the 0.59 release of React Native.
Video Introduction
At React Conf 2018, Sophie Alpert and Dan Abramov introduced Hooks, followed by Ryan Florence demonstrating how to refactor an application to use them. Watch the video here:
No Breaking Changes
Before we continue, note that Hooks are:
Completely opt-in.
You can try Hooks in a few components without rewriting any existing code. But you don’t have to learn or use Hooks right now if you don’t want to.
100% backwards-compatible.
Hooks don’t contain any breaking changes.
Available now.
Hooks are now available with the release of v16.8.0.
There are no plans to remove classes from React.
You can read more about the gradual adoption strategy for Hooks in the bottom section of this page.
Hooks don’t replace your knowledge of React concepts.
Instead, Hooks provide a more direct API to the React concepts you already know: props, state, context, refs, and lifecycle. As we will show later, Hooks also offer a new powerful way to combine them.
If you just want to start learning Hooks, feel free to jump directly to the next page!
You can also keep reading this page to learn more about why we’re adding Hooks, and how we’re going to start using them without rewriting our applications.
Motivation
Hooks solve a wide variety of seemingly unconnected problems in React that we’ve encountered over five years of writing and maintaining tens of thousands of components. Whether you’re learning React, use it daily, or even prefer a different library with a similar component model, you might recognize some of these problems.
It’s hard to reuse stateful logic between components
React doesn’t offer a way to “attach” reusable behavior to a component (for example, connecting it to a store). If you’ve worked with React for a while, you may be familiar with patterns like render props and higher-order components that try to solve this. But these patterns require you to restructure your components when you use them, which can be cumbersome and make code harder to follow. If you look at a typical React application in React DevTools, you will likely find a “wrapper hell” of components surrounded by layers of providers, consumers, higher-order components, render props, and other abstractions. While we could filter them out in DevTools, this points to a deeper underlying problem: React needs a better primitive for sharing stateful logic.
With Hooks, you can extract stateful logic from a component so it can be tested independently and reused.
Hooks allow you to reuse stateful logic without changing your component hierarchy.
This makes it easy to share Hooks among many components or with the community.
We’ll discuss this more in Building Your Own Hooks.
Complex components become hard to understand
We’ve often had to maintain components that started out simple but grew into an unmanageable mess of stateful logic and side effects. Each lifecycle method often contains a mix of unrelated logic. For example, components might perform some data fetching in
componentDidMount
and
componentDidUpdate
. However, the same
componentDidMount
method might also contain some unrelated logic that sets up event listeners, with cleanup performed in
componentWillUnmount
. Mutually related code that changes together gets split apart, but completely unrelated code ends up combined in a single method. This makes it too easy to introduce bugs and inconsistencies.
In many cases it’s not possible to break these components into smaller ones because the stateful logic is all over the place. It’s also difficult to test them. This is one of the reasons many people prefer to combine React with a separate state management library. However, that often introduces too much abstraction, requires you to jump between different files, and makes reusing components more difficult.
To solve this,
Hooks let you split one component into smaller functions based on what pieces are related (such as setting up a subscription or fetching data)
, rather than forcing a split based on lifecycle methods. You may also opt into managing the component’s local state with a reducer to make it more predictable.
We’ll discuss this more in Using the Effect Hook.
Classes confuse both people and machines
In addition to making code reuse and code organization more difficult, we’ve found that classes can be a large barrier to learning React. You have to understand how
this
works in JavaScript, which is very different from how it works in most languages. You have to remember to bind the event handlers. Without ES2022 public class fields, the code is very verbose. People can understand props, state, and top-down data flow perfectly well but still struggle with classes. The distinction between function and class components in React and when to use each one leads to disagreements even between experienced React developers.
Additionally, React has been out for about five years, and we want to make sure it stays relevant in the next five years. As Svelte, Angular, Glimmer, and others show, ahead-of-time compilation of components has a lot of future potential. Especially if it’s not limited to templates. Recently, we’ve been experimenting with component folding using Prepack, and we’ve seen promising early results. However, we found that class components can encourage unintentional patterns that make these optimizations fall back to a slower path. Classes present issues for today’s tools, too. For example, classes don’t minify very well, and they make hot reloading flaky and unreliable. We want to present an API that makes it more likely for code to stay on the optimizable path.
To solve these problems,
Hooks let you use more of React’s features without classes.
Conceptually, React components have always been closer to functions. Hooks embrace functions, but without sacrificing the practical spirit of React. Hooks provide access to imperative escape hatches and don’t require you to learn complex functional or reactive programming techniques.
Examples
Hooks at a Glance is a good place to start learning Hooks.
Gradual Adoption Strategy
TLDR: There are no plans to remove classes from React.
We know that React developers are focused on shipping products and don’t have time to look into every new API that’s being released. Hooks are very new, and it might be better to wait for more examples and tutorials before considering learning or adopting them.
We also understand that the bar for adding a new primitive to React is extremely high. For curious readers, we have prepared a detailed RFC that dives into the motivation with more details, and provides extra perspective on the specific design decisions and related prior art.
Crucially, Hooks work side-by-side with existing code so you can adopt them gradually.
There is no rush to migrate to Hooks. We recommend avoiding any “big rewrites”, especially for existing, complex class components. It takes a bit of a mind shift to start “thinking in Hooks”. In our experience, it’s best to practice using Hooks in new and non-critical components first, and ensure that everybody on your team feels comfortable with them. After you give Hooks a try, please feel free to send us feedback, positive or negative.
We intend for Hooks to cover all existing use cases for classes, but
we will keep supporting class components for the foreseeable future.
At Facebook, we have tens of thousands of components written as classes, and we have absolutely no plans to rewrite them. Instead, we are starting to use Hooks in the new code side by side with classes.
Frequently Asked Questions
We’ve prepared a Hooks FAQ page that answers the most common questions about Hooks.
Next Steps
By the end of this page, you should have a rough idea of what problems Hooks are solving, but many details are probably unclear. Don’t worry!
Let’s now go to the next page where we start learning about Hooks by example.
Read the Motivation to learn why we’re introducing Hooks to React.
↑↑↑ Each section ends with a yellow box like this.
They link to detailed explanations.
📌 State Hook
This example renders a counter. When you click the button, it increments the value:
import React,{ useState }from'react'; functionExample(){ // Declare a new state variable, which we'll call "count"const[count, setCount]=useState(0); return( <div> <p>You clicked {count} times</p> <buttononClick={()=>setCount(count +1)}> Click me </button> </div> ); }
Here,
useState
is a
Hook
(we’ll talk about what this means in a moment). We call it inside a function component to add some local state to it. React will preserve this state between re-renders.
useState
returns a pair: the
current
state value and a function that lets you update it. You can call this function from an event handler or somewhere else. It’s similar to
this.setState
in a class, except it doesn’t merge the old and new state together. (We’ll show an example comparing
useState
to
this.state
in Using the State Hook.)
The only argument to
useState
is the initial state. In the example above, it is
0
because our counter starts from zero. Note that unlike
this.state
, the state here doesn’t have to be an object — although it can be if you want. The initial state argument is only used during the first render.
Declaring multiple state variables
You can use the State Hook more than once in a single component:
The array destructuring syntax lets us give different names to the state variables we declared by calling
useState
. These names aren’t a part of the
useState
API. Instead, React assumes that if you call
useState
many times, you do it in the same order during every render. We’ll come back to why this works and when this is useful later.
But what is a Hook?
Hooks are functions that let you “hook into” React state and lifecycle features from function components. Hooks don’t work inside classes — they let you use React without classes. (We don’t recommend rewriting your existing components overnight but you can start using Hooks in the new ones if you’d like.)
React provides a few built-in Hooks like
useState
. You can also create your own Hooks to reuse stateful behavior between different components. We’ll look at the built-in Hooks first.
Detailed Explanation
You can learn more about the State Hook on a dedicated page: Using the State Hook.
⚡️ Effect Hook
You’ve likely performed data fetching, subscriptions, or manually changing the DOM from React components before. We call these operations “side effects” (or “effects” for short) because they can affect other components and can’t be done during rendering.
The Effect Hook,
useEffect
, adds the ability to perform side effects from a function component. It serves the same purpose as
componentDidMount
,
componentDidUpdate
, and
componentWillUnmount
in React classes, but unified into a single API. (We’ll show examples comparing
useEffect
to these methods in Using the Effect Hook.)
For example, this component sets the document title after React updates the DOM:
// Similar to componentDidMount and componentDidUpdate:useEffect(()=>{// Update the document title using the browser API document.title =`You clicked ${count} times`;}); return( <div> <p>You clicked {count} times</p> <buttononClick={()=>setCount(count +1)}> Click me </button> </div> ); }
When you call
useEffect
, you’re telling React to run your “effect” function after flushing changes to the DOM. Effects are declared inside the component so they have access to its props and state. By default, React runs the effects after every render —
including
the first render. (We’ll talk more about how this compares to class lifecycles in Using the Effect Hook.)
Effects may also optionally specify how to “clean up” after them by returning a function. For example, this component uses an effect to subscribe to a friend’s online status, and cleans up by unsubscribing from it:
In this example, React would unsubscribe from our
ChatAPI
when the component unmounts, as well as before re-running the effect due to a subsequent render. (If you want, there’s a way to tell React to skip re-subscribing if the
props.friend.id
we passed to
ChatAPI
didn’t change.)
Just like with
useState
, you can use more than a single effect in a component:
Hooks let you organize side effects in a component by what pieces are related (such as adding and removing a subscription), rather than forcing a split based on lifecycle methods.
Detailed Explanation
You can learn more about
useEffect
on a dedicated page: Using the Effect Hook.
✌️ Rules of Hooks
Hooks are JavaScript functions, but they impose two additional rules:
Only call Hooks
at the top level
. Don’t call Hooks inside loops, conditions, or nested functions.
Only call Hooks
from React function components
. Don’t call Hooks from regular JavaScript functions. (There is just one other valid place to call Hooks — your own custom Hooks. We’ll learn about them in a moment.)
We provide a linter plugin to enforce these rules automatically. We understand these rules might seem limiting or confusing at first, but they are essential to making Hooks work well.
Detailed Explanation
You can learn more about these rules on a dedicated page: Rules of Hooks.
💡 Building Your Own Hooks
Sometimes, we want to reuse some stateful logic between components. Traditionally, there were two popular solutions to this problem: higher-order components and render props. Custom Hooks let you do this, but without adding more components to your tree.
Earlier on this page, we introduced a
FriendStatus
component that calls the
useState
and
useEffect
Hooks to subscribe to a friend’s online status. Let’s say we also want to reuse this subscription logic in another component.
First, we’ll extract this logic into a custom Hook called
useFriendStatus
:
The state of each component is completely independent. Hooks are a way to reuse
stateful logic
, not state itself. In fact, each
call
to a Hook has a completely isolated state — so you can even use the same custom Hook twice in one component.
Custom Hooks are more of a convention than a feature. If a function’s name starts with ”
use
” and it calls other Hooks, we say it is a custom Hook. The
useSomething
naming convention is how our linter plugin is able to find bugs in the code using Hooks.
You can write custom Hooks that cover a wide range of use cases like form handling, animation, declarative subscriptions, timers, and probably many more we haven’t considered. We are excited to see what custom Hooks the React community will come up with.
Detailed Explanation
You can learn more about custom Hooks on a dedicated page: Building Your Own Hooks.
🔌 Other Hooks
There are a few less commonly used built-in Hooks that you might find useful. For example,
useContext
lets you subscribe to React context without introducing nesting:
You can learn more about all the built-in Hooks on a dedicated page: Hooks API Reference.
Next Steps
Phew, that was fast! If some things didn’t quite make sense or you’d like to learn more in detail, you can read the next pages, starting with the State Hook documentation.
You can also check out the Hooks API reference and the Hooks FAQ.
Finally, don’t miss the introduction page which explains
why
we’re adding Hooks and how we’ll start using them side by side with classes — without rewriting our apps.
The state starts as
{ count: 0 }
, and we increment
state.count
when the user clicks a button by calling
this.setState()
. We’ll use snippets from this class throughout the page.
Note
You might be wondering why we’re using a counter here instead of a more realistic example. This is to help us focus on the API while we’re still making our first steps with Hooks.
Hooks and Function Components
As a reminder, function components in React look like this:
constExample=(props)=>{ // You can use Hooks here! return<div/>; }
or this:
functionExample(props){ // You can use Hooks here! return<div/>; }
You might have previously known these as “stateless components”. We’re now introducing the ability to use React state from these, so we prefer the name “function components”.
Hooks
don’t
work inside classes. But you can use them instead of writing classes.
What’s a Hook?
Our new example starts by importing the
useState
Hook from React:
What is a Hook?
A Hook is a special function that lets you “hook into” React features. For example,
useState
is a Hook that lets you add React state to function components. We’ll learn other Hooks later.
When would I use a Hook?
If you write a function component and realize you need to add some state to it, previously you had to convert it to a class. Now you can use a Hook inside the existing function component. We’re going to do that right now!
Note:
There are some special rules about where you can and can’t use Hooks within a component. We’ll learn them in Rules of Hooks.
Declaring a State Variable
In a class, we initialize the
count
state to
0
by setting
this.state
to
{ count: 0 }
in the constructor:
In a function component, we have no
this
, so we can’t assign or read
this.state
. Instead, we call the
useState
Hook directly inside our component:
import React,{ useState }from'react';
functionExample(){ // Declare a new state variable, which we'll call "count"const[count, setCount]=useState(0);
What does calling
useState
do?
It declares a “state variable”. Our variable is called
count
but we could call it anything else, like
banana
. This is a way to “preserve” some values between the function calls —
useState
is a new way to use the exact same capabilities that
this.state
provides in a class. Normally, variables “disappear” when the function exits but state variables are preserved by React.
What do we pass to
useState
as an argument?
The only argument to the
useState()
Hook is the initial state. Unlike with classes, the state doesn’t have to be an object. We can keep a number or a string if that’s all we need. In our example, we just want a number for how many times the user clicked, so pass
0
as initial state for our variable. (If we wanted to store two different values in state, we would call
useState()
twice.)
What does
useState
return?
It returns a pair of values: the current state and a function that updates it. This is why we write
const [count, setCount] = useState()
. This is similar to
this.state.count
and
this.setState
in a class, except you get them in a pair. If you’re not familiar with the syntax we used, we’ll come back to it at the bottom of this page.
Now that we know what the
useState
Hook does, our example should make more sense:
import React,{ useState }from'react';
functionExample(){ // Declare a new state variable, which we'll call "count"const[count, setCount]=useState(0);
We declare a state variable called
count
, and set it to
0
. React will remember its current value between re-renders, and provide the most recent one to our function. If we want to update the current
count
, we can call
setCount
.
Note
You might be wondering: why is
useState
not named
createState
instead?
“Create” wouldn’t be quite accurate because the state is only created the first time our component renders. During the next renders,
useState
gives us the current state. Otherwise it wouldn’t be “state” at all! There’s also a reason why Hook names
always
start with
use
. We’ll learn why later in the Rules of Hooks.
Reading State
When we want to display the current count in a class, we read
this.state.count
:
<p>You clicked {this.state.count} times</p>
In a function, we can use
count
directly:
<p>You clicked {count} times</p>
Updating State
In a class, we need to call
this.setState()
to update the
count
state:
<buttononClick={()=>this.setState({count:this.state.count +1})}> Click me </button>
In a function, we already have
setCount
and
count
as variables so we don’t need
this
:
<buttononClick={()=>setCount(count +1)}> Click me </button>
Recap
Let’s now
recap what we learned line by line
and check our understanding.
Line 1:
We import the
useState
Hook from React. It lets us keep local state in a function component.
Line 4:
Inside the
Example
component, we declare a new state variable by calling the
useState
Hook. It returns a pair of values, to which we give names. We’re calling our variable
count
because it holds the number of button clicks. We initialize it to zero by passing
0
as the only
useState
argument. The second returned item is itself a function. It lets us update the
count
so we’ll name it
setCount
.
Line 9:
When the user clicks, we call
setCount
with a new value. React will then re-render the
Example
component, passing the new
count
value to it.
This might seem like a lot to take in at first. Don’t rush it! If you’re lost in the explanation, look at the code above again and try to read it from top to bottom. We promise that once you try to “forget” how state works in classes, and look at this code with fresh eyes, it will make sense.
Tip: What Do Square Brackets Mean?
You might have noticed the square brackets when we declare a state variable:
const[count, setCount]=useState(0);
The names on the left aren’t a part of the React API. You can name your own state variables:
const[fruit, setFruit]=useState('banana');
This JavaScript syntax is called “array destructuring”. It means that we’re making two new variables
fruit
and
setFruit
, where
fruit
is set to the first value returned by
useState
, and
setFruit
is the second. It is equivalent to this code:
var fruitStateVariable =useState('banana');// Returns a pair var fruit = fruitStateVariable[0];// First item in a pair var setFruit = fruitStateVariable[1];// Second item in a pair
When we declare a state variable with
useState
, it returns a pair — an array with two items. The first item is the current value, and the second is a function that lets us update it. Using
[0]
and
[1]
to access them is a bit confusing because they have a specific meaning. This is why we use array destructuring instead.
Note
You might be curious how React knows which component
useState
corresponds to since we’re not passing anything like
this
back to React. We’ll answer this question and many others in the FAQ section.
Tip: Using Multiple State Variables
Declaring state variables as a pair of
[something, setSomething]
is also handy because it lets us give
different
names to different state variables if we want to use more than one:
In the above component, we have
age
,
fruit
, and
todos
as local variables, and we can update them individually:
functionhandleOrangeClick(){ // Similar to this.setState({ fruit: 'orange' }) setFruit('orange'); }
You
don’t have to
use many state variables. State variables can hold objects and arrays just fine, so you can still group related data together. However, unlike
this.setState
in a class, updating a state variable always
replaces
it instead of merging it.
We provide more recommendations on splitting independent state variables in the FAQ.
Next Steps
On this page we’ve learned about one of the Hooks provided by React, called
useState
. We’re also sometimes going to refer to it as the “State Hook”. It lets us add local state to React function components — which we did for the first time ever!
We also learned a little bit more about what Hooks are. Hooks are functions that let you “hook into” React features from function components. Their names always start with
use
, and there are more Hooks we haven’t seen yet.
Now let’s continue by learning the next Hook:
useEffect
.
It lets you perform side effects in components, and is similar to lifecycle methods in classes.
// Similar to componentDidMount and componentDidUpdate:useEffect(()=>{// Update the document title using the browser API document.title =`You clicked ${count} times`;}); return( <div> <p>You clicked {count} times</p> <buttononClick={()=>setCount(count +1)}> Click me </button> </div> ); }
Data fetching, setting up a subscription, and manually changing the DOM in React components are all examples of side effects. Whether or not you’re used to calling these operations “side effects” (or just “effects”), you’ve likely performed them in your components before.
Tip
If you’re familiar with React class lifecycle methods, you can think of
useEffect
Hook as
componentDidMount
,
componentDidUpdate
, and
componentWillUnmount
combined.
There are two common kinds of side effects in React components: those that don’t require cleanup, and those that do. Let’s look at this distinction in more detail.
Effects Without Cleanup
Sometimes, we want to
run some additional code after React has updated the DOM.
Network requests, manual DOM mutations, and logging are common examples of effects that don’t require a cleanup. We say that because we can run them and immediately forget about them. Let’s compare how classes and Hooks let us express such side effects.
Example Using Classes
In React class components, the
render
method itself shouldn’t cause side effects. It would be too early — we typically want to perform our effects
after
React has updated the DOM.
This is why in React classes, we put side effects into
componentDidMount
and
componentDidUpdate
. Coming back to our example, here is a React counter class component that updates the document title right after React makes changes to the DOM:
Note how
we have to duplicate the code between these two lifecycle methods in class.
This is because in many cases we want to perform the same side effect regardless of whether the component just mounted, or if it has been updated. Conceptually, we want it to happen after every render — but React class components don’t have a method like this. We could extract a separate method but we would still have to call it in two places.
Now let’s see how we can do the same with the
useEffect
Hook.
Example Using Hooks
We’ve already seen this example at the top of this page, but let’s take a closer look at it:
What does
useEffect
do?
By using this Hook, you tell React that your component needs to do something after render. React will remember the function you passed (we’ll refer to it as our “effect”), and call it later after performing the DOM updates. In this effect, we set the document title, but we could also perform data fetching or call some other imperative API.
Why is
useEffect
called inside a component?
Placing
useEffect
inside the component lets us access the
count
state variable (or any props) right from the effect. We don’t need a special API to read it — it’s already in the function scope. Hooks embrace JavaScript closures and avoid introducing React-specific APIs where JavaScript already provides a solution.
Does
useEffect
run after every render?
Yes! By default, it runs both after the first render
and
after every update. (We will later talk about how to customize this.) Instead of thinking in terms of “mounting” and “updating”, you might find it easier to think that effects happen “after render”. React guarantees the DOM has been updated by the time it runs the effects.
Detailed Explanation
Now that we know more about effects, these lines should make sense:
We declare the
count
state variable, and then we tell React we need to use an effect. We pass a function to the
useEffect
Hook. This function we pass
is
our effect. Inside our effect, we set the document title using the
document.title
browser API. We can read the latest
count
inside the effect because it’s in the scope of our function. When React renders our component, it will remember the effect we used, and then run our effect after updating the DOM. This happens for every render, including the first one.
Experienced JavaScript developers might notice that the function passed to
useEffect
is going to be different on every render. This is intentional. In fact, this is what lets us read the
count
value from inside the effect without worrying about it getting stale. Every time we re-render, we schedule a
different
effect, replacing the previous one. In a way, this makes the effects behave more like a part of the render result — each effect “belongs” to a particular render. We will see more clearly why this is useful later on this page.
Tip
Unlike
componentDidMount
or
componentDidUpdate
, effects scheduled with
useEffect
don’t block the browser from updating the screen. This makes your app feel more responsive. The majority of effects don’t need to happen synchronously. In the uncommon cases where they do (such as measuring the layout), there is a separate
useLayoutEffect
Hook with an API identical to
useEffect
.
Effects with Cleanup
Earlier, we looked at how to express side effects that don’t require any cleanup. However, some effects do. For example,
we might want to set up a subscription
to some external data source. In that case, it is important to clean up so that we don’t introduce a memory leak! Let’s compare how we can do it with classes and with Hooks.
Example Using Classes
In a React class, you would typically set up a subscription in
componentDidMount
, and clean it up in
componentWillUnmount
. For example, let’s say we have a
ChatAPI
module that lets us subscribe to a friend’s online status. Here’s how we might subscribe and display that status using a class:
Notice how
componentDidMount
and
componentWillUnmount
need to mirror each other. Lifecycle methods force us to split this logic even though conceptually code in both of them is related to the same effect.
Note
Eagle-eyed readers may notice that this example also needs a
componentDidUpdate
method to be fully correct. We’ll ignore this for now but will come back to it in a later section of this page.
Example Using Hooks
Let’s see how we could write this component with Hooks.
You might be thinking that we’d need a separate effect to perform the cleanup. But code for adding and removing a subscription is so tightly related that
useEffect
is designed to keep it together. If your effect returns a function, React will run it when it is time to clean up:
useEffect(()=>{functionhandleStatusChange(status){setIsOnline(status.isOnline);} ChatAPI.subscribeToFriendStatus(props.friend.id, handleStatusChange);// Specify how to clean up after this effect:returnfunctioncleanup(){ ChatAPI.unsubscribeFromFriendStatus(props.friend.id, handleStatusChange);};}); if(isOnline ===null){ return'Loading...'; } return isOnline ?'Online':'Offline'; }
Why did we return a function from our effect?
This is the optional cleanup mechanism for effects. Every effect may return a function that cleans up after it. This lets us keep the logic for adding and removing subscriptions close to each other. They’re part of the same effect!
When exactly does React clean up an effect?
React performs the cleanup when the component unmounts. However, as we learned earlier, effects run for every render and not just once. This is why React
also
cleans up effects from the previous render before running the effects next time. We’ll discuss why this helps avoid bugs and how to opt out of this behavior in case it creates performance issues later below.
Note
We don’t have to return a named function from the effect. We called it
cleanup
here to clarify its purpose, but you could return an arrow function or call it something different.
Recap
We’ve learned that
useEffect
lets us express different kinds of side effects after a component renders. Some effects might require cleanup so they return a function:
The Effect Hook unifies both use cases with a single API.
If you feel like you have a decent grasp on how the Effect Hook works, or if you feel overwhelmed, you can jump to the next page about Rules of Hooks now.
Tips for Using Effects
We’ll continue this page with an in-depth look at some aspects of
useEffect
that experienced React users will likely be curious about. Don’t feel obligated to dig into them now. You can always come back to this page to learn more details about the Effect Hook.
Tip: Use Multiple Effects to Separate Concerns
One of the problems we outlined in the Motivation for Hooks is that class lifecycle methods often contain unrelated logic, but related logic gets broken up into several methods. Here is a component that combines the counter and the friend status indicator logic from the previous examples:
Note how the logic that sets
document.title
is split between
componentDidMount
and
componentDidUpdate
. The subscription logic is also spread between
componentDidMount
and
componentWillUnmount
. And
componentDidMount
contains code for both tasks.
So, how can Hooks solve this problem? Just like you can use the
State
Hook more than once, you can also use several effects. This lets us separate unrelated logic into different effects:
Hooks let us split the code based on what it is doing
rather than a lifecycle method name. React will apply
every
effect used by the component, in the order they were specified.
Explanation: Why Effects Run on Each Update
If you’re used to classes, you might be wondering why the effect cleanup phase happens after every re-render, and not just once during unmounting. Let’s look at a practical example to see why this design helps us create components with fewer bugs.
Earlier on this page, we introduced an example
FriendStatus
component that displays whether a friend is online or not. Our class reads
friend.id
from
this.props
, subscribes to the friend status after the component mounts, and unsubscribes during unmounting:
But what happens if the
friend
prop changes
while the component is on the screen? Our component would continue displaying the online status of a different friend. This is a bug. We would also cause a memory leak or crash when unmounting since the unsubscribe call would use the wrong friend ID.
In a class component, we would need to add
componentDidUpdate
to handle this case:
componentDidUpdate(prevProps){// Unsubscribe from the previous friend.id ChatAPI.unsubscribeFromFriendStatus( prevProps.friend.id,this.handleStatusChange);// Subscribe to the next friend.id ChatAPI.subscribeToFriendStatus(this.props.friend.id,this.handleStatusChange);} componentWillUnmount(){ ChatAPI.unsubscribeFromFriendStatus( this.props.friend.id, this.handleStatusChange ); }
Forgetting to handle
componentDidUpdate
properly is a common source of bugs in React applications.
Now consider the version of this component that uses Hooks:
It doesn’t suffer from this bug. (But we also didn’t make any changes to it.)
There is no special code for handling updates because
useEffect
handles them
by default
. It cleans up the previous effects before applying the next effects. To illustrate this, here is a sequence of subscribe and unsubscribe calls that this component could produce over time:
// Mount with { friend: { id: 100 } } props ChatAPI.subscribeToFriendStatus(100, handleStatusChange);// Run first effect
// Update with { friend: { id: 200 } } props ChatAPI.unsubscribeFromFriendStatus(100, handleStatusChange);// Clean up previous effect ChatAPI.subscribeToFriendStatus(200, handleStatusChange);// Run next effect
// Update with { friend: { id: 300 } } props ChatAPI.unsubscribeFromFriendStatus(200, handleStatusChange);// Clean up previous effect ChatAPI.subscribeToFriendStatus(300, handleStatusChange);// Run next effect
// Unmount ChatAPI.unsubscribeFromFriendStatus(300, handleStatusChange);// Clean up last effect
This behavior ensures consistency by default and prevents bugs that are common in class components due to missing update logic.
Tip: Optimizing Performance by Skipping Effects
In some cases, cleaning up or applying the effect after every render might create a performance problem. In class components, we can solve this by writing an extra comparison with
prevProps
or
prevState
inside
componentDidUpdate
:
This requirement is common enough that it is built into the
useEffect
Hook API. You can tell React to
skip
applying an effect if certain values haven’t changed between re-renders. To do so, pass an array as an optional second argument to
useEffect
:
useEffect(()=>{ document.title =`You clicked ${count} times`; },[count]);// Only re-run the effect if count changes
In the example above, we pass
[count]
as the second argument. What does this mean? If the
count
is
5
, and then our component re-renders with
count
still equal to
5
, React will compare
[5]
from the previous render and
[5]
from the next render. Because all items in the array are the same (
5 === 5
), React would skip the effect. That’s our optimization.
When we render with
count
updated to
6
, React will compare the items in the
[5]
array from the previous render to items in the
[6]
array from the next render. This time, React will re-apply the effect because
5 !== 6
. If there are multiple items in the array, React will re-run the effect even if just one of them is different.
This also works for effects that have a cleanup phase:
ChatAPI.subscribeToFriendStatus(props.friend.id, handleStatusChange); return()=>{ ChatAPI.unsubscribeFromFriendStatus(props.friend.id, handleStatusChange); }; },[props.friend.id]);// Only re-subscribe if props.friend.id changes
In the future, the second argument might get added automatically by a build-time transformation.
Note
If you use this optimization, make sure the array includes
all values from the component scope (such as props and state) that change over time and that are used by the effect
. Otherwise, your code will reference stale values from previous renders. Learn more about how to deal with functions and what to do when the array changes too often.
If you want to run an effect and clean it up only once (on mount and unmount), you can pass an empty array (
[]
) as a second argument. This tells React that your effect doesn’t depend on
any
values from props or state, so it never needs to re-run. This isn’t handled as a special case — it follows directly from how the dependencies array always works.
If you pass an empty array (
[]
), the props and state inside the effect will always have their initial values. While passing
[]
as the second argument is closer to the familiar
componentDidMount
and
componentWillUnmount
mental model, there are usually better solutions to avoid re-running effects too often. Also, don’t forget that React defers running
useEffect
until after the browser has painted, so doing extra work is less of a problem.
We recommend using the
exhaustive-deps
rule as part of our
eslint-plugin-react-hooks
package. It warns when dependencies are specified incorrectly and suggests a fix.
Next Steps
Congratulations! This was a long page, but hopefully by the end most of your questions about effects were answered. You’ve learned both the State Hook and the Effect Hook, and there is a
lot
you can do with both of them combined. They cover most of the use cases for classes — and where they don’t, you might find the additional Hooks helpful.
We’re also starting to see how Hooks solve problems outlined in Motivation. We’ve seen how effect cleanup avoids duplication in
componentDidUpdate
and
componentWillUnmount
, brings related code closer together, and helps us avoid bugs. We’ve also seen how we can separate effects by their purpose, which is something we couldn’t do in classes at all.
At this point you might be questioning how Hooks work. How can React know which
useState
call corresponds to which state variable between re-renders? How does React “match up” previous and next effects on every update?
On the next page we will learn about the Rules of Hooks — they’re essential to making Hooks work.