Equivalent to componentDidUpdate using React hooks

FMCorz picture FMCorz · Nov 12, 2018 · Viewed 38.3k times · Source

tldr; How do I simulate componentDidUpdate or otherwise use the key prop with an array to force my component to be reset?

I'm implementing a component which displays a timer and executes a callback when it reaches zero. The intent is for the callback to update a list of objects. The latter component is made of the new React hooks useState and useEffect.

The state contains a reference to the time at which the timer was started, and the time remaining. The effect sets an interval called every second to update the time remaining, and to check whether the callback should be called.

The component is not meant to reschedule a timer, or keep the interval going when it reaches zero, it's supposed to execute the callback and idle. In order for the timer to refresh, I was hoping to pass an array to key which would cause the component's state to be reset, and thus the timer would restart. Unfortunately key must be used with a string, and therefore whether or not my array's reference has changed produces no effect.

I also tried to push changes to the props by passing the array that I was concerned about, but the state was maintained and thus the interval was not reset.

What would be the preferred method to observe shallow changes in an array in order to force a state to be updated solely using the new hooks API?

import React, { useState, useEffect } from 'react';
import PropTypes from 'prop-types';

function getTimeRemaining(startedAt, delay) {
    const now = new Date();
    const end = new Date(startedAt.getTime() + delay);
    return Math.max(0, end.getTime() - now.getTime());
}

function RefresherTimer(props) {
    const [startedAt, setStartedAt] = useState(new Date());
    const [timeRemaining, setTimeRemaining] = useState(getTimeRemaining(startedAt, props.delay));

    useEffect(() => {

        if (timeRemaining <= 0) {
            // The component is set to idle, we do not set the interval.
            return;
        }

        // Set the interval to refresh the component every second.
        const i = setInterval(() => {
            const nowRemaining = getTimeRemaining(startedAt, props.delay);
            setTimeRemaining(nowRemaining);

            if (nowRemaining <= 0) {
                props.callback();
                clearInterval(i);
            }
        }, 1000);

        return () => {
            clearInterval(i);
        };
    });

    let message = `Refreshing in ${Math.ceil(timeRemaining / 1000)}s.`;
    if (timeRemaining <= 0) {
        message = 'Refreshing now...';
    }

    return <div>{message}</div>;
}

RefresherTimer.propTypes = {
    callback: PropTypes.func.isRequired,
    delay: PropTypes.number
};

RefresherTimer.defaultProps = {
    delay: 2000
};

export default RefresherTimer;

Attempted to use with key:

<RefresherTimer delay={20000} callback={props.updateListOfObjects} key={listOfObjects} />

Attempted to use with a props change:

<RefresherTimer delay={20000} callback={props.updateListOfObjects} somethingThatChanges={listOfObjects} />

listOfObjects refers to an array of objects, where the objects themselves won't necessarily change, so the array should be compared with !==. Typically, the value will be coming from Redux, where the action updateListOfObjects causes the array to be reinitialised like so: newListOfObjects = [...listOfObjects].

Answer

Morgan Cheng picture Morgan Cheng · Nov 21, 2018

The useRef creates an "instance variable" in functional component. It acts as a flag to indicate whether it is in mount or update phase without updating state.

const mounted = useRef();
useEffect(() => {
  if (!mounted.current) {
    // do componentDidMount logic
    mounted.current = true;
  } else {
    // do componentDidUpdate logic
  }
});