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react-use-call-onnext-render
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0.5.0 • Public • Published

react-use-call-onnext-render

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an efficient and smart hook to schedule a callback for a later render.

installation

with npm npm react-use-call-onnext-render.
or yarn add react-use-call-onnext-render.

Usage

if want to access a lifecycle variable next render's value, this is the hook for you!
An example for such use case can be a callback function to update state based on properties of DOM element that will be available only on next render(s).

combined with useEffect with dependency list, you could schedule a callback after certain changes.

this hook smartly avoids infinite re-renders loop calls and behaves in intuitive way. for behavior example see HookBehavior example.

this hook is very useful when accessing DOM elements.

Examples

schedule a callback:

schedule a callback for the next render:

const YourComponent = () => {
    const callOnNextRender = useCallOnNextRender()
    useEffect(() => {
        console.log("your component did a mount")
        callOnNextRender(() => {
            console.log("one render after mount")
        })
    }, [])
    return <>...</>
}

schedule a callback for later call and don't force re-render:

this hook by default rerender the hooked component until the wanted render count has reached, and only then execute the callback. if this is not the desired behavior you can pass false to the third argument of callOnNextRender:

const YourComponent = () => {
    const callOnNextRender = useCallOnNextRender()
    useEffect(() => {
        console.log("your component did a mount")
        callOnNextRender(() => {
            console.log("5 renders after mount")
        }, 5, false)
    }, [])
    return <>...</>
}

this will schedule a callback for the 5'th render after mount, and will execute the callback function when this render occurs.

hook behavior:

let's look in the following example:

const YourComponent = () => {
    const nextRender = useCallOnNextRender();
    useEffect(() => {
        nextRender(() => log('after mount'));
        log('finished mount');
    }, []);
    useEffect(() => {
        nextRender(() => log('after render'));
        log('finished render');
        render.current += 1;
    });
    log('update call');
    call.current += 1;
    return <>...</>
};

what order of logs would you expect? well, I would expect this order:

/**
 * expected logs order:
 *    update call       {call:0,render:0}
 *    finished mount    {call:1,render:0}
 *    finished render   {call:1,render:0}
 *    update call       {call:1,render:1}
 *    after mount       {call:2,render:1}
 *    after render      {call:2,render:1}
 *    finished render   {call:2,render:1}
 */

And know what? this is the exact order that would fire using this hook! see HookBehavior example in the code sandbox demos.

dom example:

let's say we want to get dimensions of a removable DOM element that is controlled by showBox state variable. for that we can use getBoundingClientRect(). however, we want to call this function only after the element mounted into the dom, so will schedule this call one render after changing showBox:

const YourComponent = () => {
    const [showBox, setShowBox] = useState(false)
    const divRef = useRef()
    const useCallOnNextRender = useCallOnNextRender()

    return (
        <>
            <React.Fragment>
                <button
                    style={boxStyle}
                    onClick={() => {
                        setShowBox(!showBox);
                        callOnNextShowBoxChange(() => console.log(boxRef?.current?.getBoundingClientRect())); //right value
                    }}>
                    toggle show box
                </button>
                <div style={{border: 'black solid 1px'}}>
                    {showBox ? (
                        <div ref={boxRef} style={boxStyle}>
                            box2
                        </div>
                    ) : null}
                </div>
            </React.Fragment>
        </>
    );
};

see the 3'th example in the code sandbox.

Although these examples are simple, you can go smart with this hook.

Demos

code sandbox: https://codesandbox.io/s/github/Eliav2/react-use-call-onnext-render/tree/main/example

API

// type
export type useCallOnNextRenderType = (effectHook?: useEffect|useLayOutEffect) => (func: any, renderDelay?: number, forceRender?: boolean) => void;

const callOnNextRender = useCallOnNextRender();
callOnNextRender:(callback:Function, renderDelay ? : number = 1, forceRender ? : boolean = true)=>void;

note that renderDelay is relative to the current render and not an absolute value!

Notes

  • calling callOnNextRender with renderDelay of 0(or less) is not supported. this is just equivalent running any function immediately in the scope you called callOnNextRender.
  • default value for renderDelay is 1 which means that by default the callback function will be called in the next render.
  • calling callOnNextRender(someCallback) will force the next render even if this not necessary in terms of react, the later renders are optionally forced based on forceRender argument.
  • using this hook will render your component twice after mount(instead of once),in case your component normally render twice no more renders will be triggered.

useCallOnNextIteration

this repo also includes useCallOnNextIteration - like a managed queue for of calls. similar to useCallOnNextRender but is not bounded component lifecycle. for example can be run in a for loop.

this hook is not well tested, use it on your own risk.

// example usage
const callOnNextIteration = useCallOnNextIteration();
for (let i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
    console.log('i=', i);
    callOnNextIteration(() => console.log('callOnNextIteration call', i), 5);
}
//this will console.log
// i= 0
// i= 1
// i= 2
// i= 3
// i= 4
// i= 5
// callOnNextIteration call 0
// i= 6
// callOnNextIteration call 1
// i= 7
// callOnNextIteration call 2
// i= 8
// callOnNextIteration call 3
// i= 9
// and so on...

Versions

See CHANGELOG.md in this repo.

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npm i react-use-call-onnext-render

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Version

0.5.0

License

MIT

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Collaborators

  • eliav2