How does React.js re-render components? - reactjs

I'm new to react. I'm going through their docs to understand how react works. So it was mentioned that when state/props/setState() changes/called, react rerenders the entire component.
Also, I read that react elements are immutable and they are rendered only when there is a change. So when react tries to render a component it actually traverses through all the elements checks for differences and renders only those elements whose data is changed. It won't simply re-render the entire component.
Am I right regarding this? Or is my understanding wrong?

I read that React elements are immutable and they are rendered only when there is a change.
Saying that React elements are immutable is not true, you need to treat them as immutable, especially component's state and props.
So when React tries to render a component it actually traverses through all the elements checks for differences and renders only those elements whose data is changed.
The default behaviour is to render all sub tree when the parent rerendered by calling setState (which triggers Reconciliation on component's sub tree).
So saying it will render components on "data change" is not true, they will rerender anyway by default, even if the "data" didn't change.
On saying "data is changed" we mean on props change (shallow comparison by default, use memoization to change it).
We can use key prop to help with the reconciliation process.

You are right, react re-renders the component when props or state changes.
That being said, when a child component received new props, react does not check if the props have changed when you use React.Component, it just re-renders even if you pass same props again.
In order to make components render only if they receive different props you can use React.PureComponent in case of class components or you can wrap the component with React.memo() in case of functional components.

I believe a clearer way to summarize when React components re-render would be:
React components re-render when, and only when:
Their state changes (via setState() or useState())
They are passed new props;
Their parent component re-renders.
Caveats:
You must update state correctly for the component to re-render, i.e. via setState() or useState(). If state changes via other, "illegal" means, such as directly accessing state, React won't notice, and won't re-render the component.
React props are read-only, so when we say "when a component's props change," we really mean when the component is passed props with changed values. The props should not be mutated within the component.
If you use useMemo() or React.memo(), then a child component will only re-render when the parent component re-renders if the props it receives have changed.
It's important to distinguish between re-rendering the virtual DOM and updating the actual DOM. Just because a component re-renders doesn't mean it's updated the DOM. When a component re-renders, React compares the new version to the previous, and only updates the actual DOM if something has changed 1, 2.

Nothing has made this clearer for me than this cheat sheet by A. Sidorenko.
Edit:
Essentially yes any state change will trigger a re-render. This includes the component where the state change was initiated and all its children. For instance, if your composition is:
A > B > C
If the state for A is updated then A, B, and C will get re-rendered. There are ways to prevent re-rendering subcomponents (e.g. memo, useMemo) so I point you the cheat sheet referred to above for the complete details.

Related

React rerender props change vs local state change

Why the component Demo does not rerender on counter change?
I understand that props.children are equal to the previous ones, however local state changes, so it should rerender. Is changing local state optimized somehow to detect whether some part of the Top component should be rerendered or shouldn`t?
Children props example
In the second example it does rerender, what is the difference between these examples?
Local state change
In the examples you can click on button and see in the console whether Demo is rerendered.
In the first case you're passing the children which is a part of props and essentially on each re-render of Top component, the same children reference is being returned so React detects that and doesn't re-render the Demo component.
In the second case, React will internally execute React.createElement(...) again to create the Demo component and that's a new reference.
Here is a good line to remember this by :-
if a React component returns the exact same element reference in its
render output as it did the last time, React will skip re-rendering
that particular child
I referred this here - https://blog.isquaredsoftware.com/2020/05/blogged-answers-a-mostly-complete-guide-to-react-rendering-behavior/#component-render-optimization-techniques
This is because passing children argument to the Top component you are passing a reference to this object. React can detect that nothing has changed comparing to the previous version so it will not re-render it.
When you are rendering component using name <Demo /> in your Top component you are rendering a new version of Demo component every time.

Re-render React component after props change

In the React docs, it says
By default, when your component’s state or props change, your component will re-render.
I understand for state changes, but I am not sure about when props change. As far as I am aware, props are always passed from the parent component to the child component. And when the parent component re-renders (due to a state change, for example), all child components also re-render (ignoring shouldComponentUpdate). So it seems to me that if the parent component re-renders, all child components will re-render regardless of whether I am passing new props to them or not. If I do pass new props to the child component, the fact the child re-renders is simply because the parent is re-rendering, not because I am passing new props.
Is there a scenario where a parent component passes new props to a child component, causing the child component to re-render, but it is not caused simply by the parent component re-rendering?
Is it possible to see an example where a component will re-render because it receives new props, rather than because the parent is re-rendering (or its own state changed)?
Sorry if this is a basic question, I am new to React.
EDIT: I see that Redux can cause components to re-render by passing new props, I'm curious to know what Redux is doing behind the scenes to achieve this.
To answer the question you ask at the end:
If the child is a PureComponent or wrapped in React.memo it will only re-render if the props change. If the parent re-renders then the component will compare the props it receives and if they're identical to the previously passed props it will not re-render.
If the child is not a PureComponent or wrapped in React.memo then it will re-render any time its parent re-renders.
I‘m not new to react and was asking the same thing. There was an article which made it clear for me: https://thoughtbot.com/blog/react-rendering-misconception
The re-render is needed for diff-checking if DOM updates are necessary. If you‘ve implemented shouldComponentUpdate or wrapped with memo (both returning false), then rerender is skipped.
If a child component is connected using redux or context, then it might rerender even without parent being rerendered.
When you use provider, or HOC, or Redux with mapStateToProps for example, the props are changed from other component injecting props.
Connect middleware of redux is similar to subscription, each child component can directly connect to the store through subscription, and whenever the store changes, the store tries to resync all its connected components. New incoming data to any component comes as props resulting in re-render.
Any component getting changed from outside of its state can be through props only, so it is similar to a parent component passing new data / redux store pushing new data to the component.

How does react decide to rerender a component

I know React has a life cycle method called shouldComponentUpdate, Which by default return true and that's how the component decides to update
But How does that life cycle method gets called, When a state or props change for that component. What actually happens when we receive new props or state? When We connect a component to redux state and mapStateToProps, Are we checking for a change in values inside the component? If not, When We are looking for a change in state or props?
when the props or state changes, how the life cycle methods are called?. Do we have a listener that calls these methods when the props or state changes?
You should look at lifecycles of both, how they perform and in what order each method gets called. Looking at react lifecycle image bellow you can see the difference between componentWillMount and componentDidMount and others like componentDidUpdate, componentWillUpdate and so on...
Also you should reason when to use each method
To update state you call this.setState() which tells react that something has changed and it will re-render component tree. If you use this.state.data = something react won't trigger render(). Now to update props, you need to understand how render() actually works. This answer is summarized from existing anwser already:
Every time render() is called react will create a new virtual DOM
where the root node is the component whose render function is called.
The render() function is called when either the state or the props of
a component or any of its children change. The render() function
destroys all of the old virtual DOM nodes starting from the root and
creates a brand new virtual DOM.
In order to make sure the re-rendering of components is smooth and
efficient React uses the Diffing Algorithm to reduce the time it takes
to create a new tree to a time complexity of O(n), usually time
complexity for copying trees is > O(n^2). The way it accomplishes this
is by using the "key" attribute on each of the elements in the DOM.
React knows that instead of creating each element from scratch it can
check the "key" attribute on each node in the DOM. This is why you get
a warning if you don't set the "key" attribute of each element, React
uses the keys to vastly increase its rendering speed.
React Lifecycle
Redux Lifecycle
If you use redux library, may be, your component does not re-render after your props changes. Checkout this issue to resolve the props changes problem with componentWillReceiveProps

Re-render `connect()`ed sub-component if parent's `shouldComponentUpdate`=false?

I was wondering if a connect()ed sub-component will re-render if its parent returns false in shouldComponentUpdate?
Say, we have a component tree looking like this
connect(Foo extends PureComponent)
DumbBar
connect(Baz extends PureComponent)
So neither Baz, nor Foo, should re-render if their own props, supplied to them by mapStateToProps, keeps the same. But what happens if the state of the redux store changes and the connect()ed Baz component is notified of a state change and is supplied with new props? Will it re-render, or will the hierarchical update model of React prevent anything from rendering?
Or is this whole question perhaps a bit off, since it's not possible for a child components new rendering to take effect without affecting the ancestors - forcing the ancestors to re-render if a child changes?
If the last point is true, then putting a connect-ed component as a child of a PureComponent is lethal, as it breaks all optimizations you thought were in place, causing re-renders in other places in the sub-tree of the parent.
Yes, it will re-render.
That's the whole idea of using connect - you don't have to pass the props and you can embed it anywhere - it will take care of keeping your component up-to-date.
Each component built with connect will wire up it's own subscription to be notified of changes to the redux store.
So if only the props supplied to mapStateToProps for the child component have changed then the child component will re-render whereas the parent component will not.
You can see this yourself by adding a simple console.log to the render function.

Why does a component re-render if props are equal

I created a simple react app and checked the app for re-renders with why-did-you-update library and it shows unnecessary re-renders and how to prevent these re-renders?
Components will get re-rendered if their props change, or if their parent has been re-rendered. It's possible that you have update the props or state of a parent component. React provides a lifecycle function called shouldComponentUpdate to deal with unnecessary renders. It is quicker and easier to implement if you use immutable data for your props since you can simply do an equality check between new props and old props to see if there was any change. See https://facebook.github.io/react/docs/component-specs.html#updating-shouldcomponentupdate and https://facebook.github.io/react/docs/pure-render-mixin.html

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