fp-ts-react-stable-hooks

Stable hooks for react using FP-TS equality checks instead of shallow (reference) object comparison


Keywords
fp-ts, react, useState, useEffect, useStable, stable, equality, deep, object, comparison
License
MIT
Install
npm install fp-ts-react-stable-hooks@1.5.0

Documentation

fp-ts-react-stable-hooks

Reduce unnecessary rerenders when using fp-ts data types with React hooks.

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Stable hooks use fp-ts equality functions instead of React's shallow (reference) object comparison.

By default React will perform a JavaScript object reference comparison of two objects, otherwise known as shallow object comparison, which results in extra re-renders on “unchanged” values for fp-ts data types.

For example: Take an fp-ts type such as Option who’s underlying data structure is is {_tag: "Some", value: 1}. Compared with another Option who's value is also {_tag: "Some", value: 1}, they will be considered different objects with JavaScript object reference comparison since O.some(1) !== O.some(1).

However, an equality function can dive down into the underlying value type and prove its equality. Given that, an equality function such as O.getEq(Eq.eqNumber) can prove that O.getEq(Eq.eqNumber).equals(O.some(1), O.some(1)) === true. Using these stable hooks instead of the basic react hooks will result in fewer unnecessary re-renders when using fp-ts data types.

Installation

npm install fp-ts-react-stable-hooks

Usage

Simple example useStableO with Option helper equality function

import * as Eq from "fp-ts/Eq";
import * as O from "fp-ts/Option";
import { useStableO } from "fp-ts-react-stable-hooks";

// Equality function defaults to Eq.eqStrict so there is no need to provide
// it for primitive data types such as string, number, or boolean
const [data, setData] = useStableO(O.some("foobar"));

Complex example useStable with equality function

import * as Eq from "fp-ts/Eq";
import * as O from "fp-ts/Option";
import { useStable } from "fp-ts-react-stable-hooks";

const [data, setData] = useStable(
  O.some({foo: "oof", bar: 1}),
  O.getEq(Eq.eqStruct({foo: Eq.eqString, bar: Eq.eqNumber}))
);

Example useEffect with equality function

import * as Eq from "fp-ts/Eq";
import * as O from "fp-ts/Option";
import { useStableEffect } from "fp-ts-react-stable-hooks";

const data: O.Option<string> = O.some("foobar");

useStableEffect(() => {
  // Typical react useEffect function goes in here
  ...
}, [data], Eq.getTupleEq(O.getEq(Eq.eqString)));

Debugging Your Hooks

You can console log the reasons behind why certain hooks are called again by passing a debug flag to each one of the stable hooks which have equality functions provided in the API. The last parameter of the function is now a config object: StableHookOptions.

You can pass {debug: true} to have the console logs printed in all environments except for production.

API

React Hook Stable Hook Description
useState useStable Base hook that requires an equality function
useStableE Helper function which automatically proves the top level equality function for Either
useStableO Helper function which automatically proves the top level equality function for Option
useEffect useStableEffect Base hook that requires an equality function
useLayoutEffect useStableLayoutEffect Base hook that requires an equality function
useCallback useStableCallback Base hook that requires an equality function
useMemo useStableMemo Base hook that requires an equality function

React Hooks Linter

If you already use the recommended react hooks lint rule you can add this to your eslint file.

"react-hooks/exhaustive-deps": ["warn", {
  "additionalHooks": "(useStableEffect|useStableLayoutEffect|useStableCallback|useStableMemo)"
}]