Why Did You Render
why-did-you-render
by Welldone Software monkey patches React
to notify you about avoidable re-renders. (Works with React Native
as well.)
For example, if you pass style={{width: '100%'}}
to a big pure component it would always re-render on every element creation:
<BigListPureComponent style={{width: '100%'}}/>
It can also help you to simply track when and why a certain component re-renders.
Setup
The last version of the library has been tested (unit tests and E2E) with React@16.14
and React@17.0.1
but it is expected to work with all React@16
and React17
versions.
npm install @welldone-software/why-did-you-render --save
If you use the automatic JSX transformation, set the library to be the import source, and make sure preset-react
is in development
mode.
['@babel/preset-react', {
runtime: 'automatic',
development: process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development',
importSource: '@welldone-software/why-did-you-render',
}]
Create a wdyr.js
file and import it as the first import in your application.
wdyr.js
:
import React from 'react';
if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development') {
const whyDidYouRender = require('@welldone-software/why-did-you-render');
whyDidYouRender(React, {
trackAllPureComponents: true,
});
}
Notice: The library should NEVER be used in production because it slows down React
Import wdyr.js
as the first import (even before react-hot-loader
):
index.js
:
import './wdyr';
import 'react-hot-loader';
import {hot} from 'react-hot-loader/root';
import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import {App} from './app';
const HotApp = hot(App);
ReactDOM.render(<HotApp/>, document.getElementById('root'));
If you use trackAllPureComponents
like we suggest, all pure components (React.PureComponent or React.memo) will be tracked.
Otherwise, add whyDidYouRender = true
to components you want to track.
More information about what is tracked can be found in Tracking Components.
Can't see any WDYR logs? Check out the troubleshoot or search the issues.
Custom Hooks
Also, tracking custom hooks is possible by using trackExtraHooks
. For example if you want to track useSelector
from React Redux:
wdyr.js
:
import React from 'react';
if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development') {
const whyDidYouRender = require('@welldone-software/why-did-you-render');
const ReactRedux = require('react-redux');
whyDidYouRender(React, {
trackAllPureComponents: true,
trackExtraHooks: [
[ReactRedux, 'useSelector']
]
});
}
Notice that there's currently a problem with rewriting exports of imported files in webpack
. A quick workaround can help with it: #85 - trackExtraHooks cannot set property.
Read More
Integration With Other Libraries
Sandbox
You can test the library in the official sandbox.
And another official sandbox with hooks tracking
Tracking Components
You can track all pure components (React.PureComponent or React.memo) using the trackAllPureComponents: true
option.
You can also manually track any component you want by setting whyDidYouRender
on them like this:
class BigList extends React.Component {
static whyDidYouRender = true
render(){
return (
)
}
}
Or for functional components:
const BigListPureComponent = props => (
<div>
//some heavy component you want to ensure doesn't happen if its not necessary
</div>
)
BigListPureComponent.whyDidYouRender = true
You can also pass an object to specify more advanced tracking settings:
EnhancedMenu.whyDidYouRender = {
logOnDifferentValues: true,
customName: 'Menu'
}
-
logOnDifferentValues
:
Normally, only re-renders that are caused by equal values in props / state trigger notifications:
render(<Menu a={1}/>)
render(<Menu a={1}/>)
This option will trigger notifications even if they occurred because of different props / state (Thus, because of "legit" re-renders):
render(<Menu a={1}/>)
render(<Menu a={2}/>)
-
customName
:
Sometimes the name of the component can be missing or very inconvenient. For example:
withPropsOnChange(withPropsOnChange(withStateHandlers(withPropsOnChange(withState(withPropsOnChange(lifecycle(withPropsOnChange(withPropsOnChange(onlyUpdateForKeys(LoadNamespace(Connect(withState(withState(withPropsOnChange(lifecycle(withPropsOnChange(withHandlers(withHandlers(withHandlers(withHandlers(Connect(lifecycle(Menu)))))))))))))))))))))))
Options
Optionally you can pass in options
as the second parameter. The following options are available:
include: [RegExp, ...]
(null
by default)exclude: [RegExp, ...]
(null
by default)trackAllPureComponents: false
trackHooks: true
trackExtraHooks: []
logOwnerReasons: true
logOnDifferentValues: false
hotReloadBufferMs: 500
onlyLogs: false
collapseGroups: false
titleColor
diffNameColor
diffPathColor
notifier: ({Component, displayName, hookName, prevProps, prevState, prevHook, nextProps, nextState, nextHook, reason, options, ownerDataMap}) => void
include / exclude
(default: null
)
You can include or exclude tracking of components by their displayName using the include
and exclude
options.
For example, the following code is used to track all redundant re-renders that are caused by older React-Redux:
whyDidYouRender(React, { include: [/^ConnectFunction/] });
Notice: exclude takes priority over both include
and manually set whyDidYouRender =
trackAllPureComponents
(default: false
)
You can track all pure components (both React.memo
and React.PureComponent
components)
Notice: You can exclude the tracking of any specific component with whyDidYouRender = false
trackHooks
(default: true
)
You can turn off tracking of hooks changes.
Understand and fix hook issues.
(default: []
)
Track custom hooks:
whyDidYouRender(React, {
trackExtraHooks: [
[ReactRedux, 'useSelector']
]
});
There is currently a problem with rewriting exports of imported files in webpack. A workaround is available here: #85 - trackExtraHooks cannot set property
logOwnerReasons
(default: true
)
One way of fixing re-render issues is preventing the component's owner from re-rendering.
This option is true
by default and it lets you view the reasons why an owner component re-renders.
logOnDifferentValues
(default: false
)
Normally, you only want logs about component re-renders when they could have been avoided.
With this option, it is possible to track all re-renders.
For example:
render(<BigListPureComponent a={1}/>)
render(<BigListPureComponent a={2}/>)
hotReloadBufferMs
(default: 500
)
Time in milliseconds to ignore updates after a hot reload is detected.
When a hot reload is detected, we ignore all updates for hotReloadBufferMs
to not spam the console.
onlyLogs
(default: false
)
If you don't want to use console.group
to group logs you can print them as simple logs.
collapseGroups
(default: false
)
Grouped logs can be collapsed.
titleColor / diffNameColor / diffPathColor
(default titleColor: '#058'
)
(default diffNameColor: 'blue'
)
(default diffPathColor: 'red'
)
Controls the colors used in the console notifications
notifier
(default: defaultNotifier that is exposed from the library)
You can create a custom notifier if the default one does not suite your needs.
Troubleshooting
No tracking
- If you are in production, WDYR is probably disabled.
- Maybe no component is tracked
- Maybe you have no issues
-
Try causing an issue by temporary rendering the whole app twice in it's entry point:
index.js
:
const HotApp = hot(App);
HotApp.whyDidYouRender = true;
ReactDOM.render(<HotApp/>, document.getElementById('root'));
ReactDOM.render(<HotApp/>, document.getElementById('root'));
Custom Hooks tracking (like useSelector)
There's currently a problem with rewriting exports of imported files in webpack
. A quick workaround can help with it: #85 - trackExtraHooks cannot set property.
React-Redux connect
HOC is spamming the console
Since connect
hoists statics, if you add WDYR to the inner component, it is also added to the HOC component where complex hooks are running.
To fix this, add the whyDidYouRender = true
static to a component after the connect:
const SimpleComponent = ({a}) => <div data-testid="foo">{a.b}</div>)
const ConnectedSimpleComponent = connect(
state => ({a: state.a})
)(SimpleComponent)
SimpleComponent.whyDidYouRender = true
Sourcemaps
To see the library's sourcemaps use the source-map-loader.
Credit
Inspired by the following previous work:
https://github.com/maicki/why-did-you-update which I had the chance to maintain for some time.
https://github.com/garbles/why-did-you-update where A deep dive into React perf debugging is credited for the idea.
License
This library is MIT licensed.