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      useEffect

      How To Call Web APIs with the useEffect Hook in React


      The author selected Creative Commons to receive a donation as part of the Write for DOnations program.

      Introduction

      In React development, web application programming interfaces (APIs) are an integral part of single-page application (SPA) designs. APIs are the primary way for applications to programmatically communicate with servers to provide users with real-time data and to save user changes. In React applications, you will use APIs to load user preferences, display user information, fetch configuration or security information, and save application state changes.

      In this tutorial, you’ll use the useEffect and useState Hooks to fetch and display information in a sample application, using JSON server as a local API for testing purposes. You’ll load information when a component first mounts and save customer inputs with an API. You’ll also refresh data when a user makes a change and learn how to ignore API requests when a component unmounts. By the end of this tutorial, you’ll be able to connect your React applications to a variety of APIs and you’ll be able to send and receive real-time data.

      Prerequisites

      Step 1 — Creating a Project and a Local API

      In this step, you’ll create a local REST API using JSON server, which you will use as a test data source. Later, you’ll build an application to display a grocery list and to add items to the list. JSON server will be your local API and will give you a live URL to make GET and POST requests. With a local API, you have the opportunity to prototype and test components while you or another team develops live APIs.

      By the end of this step, you’ll be able to create local mock APIs that you can connect to with your React applications.

      On many agile teams, front-end and API teams work on a problem in parallel. In order to develop a front-end application while a remote API is still in development, you can create a local version that you can use while waiting for a complete remote API.

      There are many ways to make a mock local API. You can create a simple server using Node or another language, but the quickest way is to use the JSON server Node package. This project creates a local REST API from a JSON file.

      To begin, install json-server:

      • npm install --save-dev json-server

      When the installation is finished, you’ll receive a success message:

      Output

      + json-server@0.16.1 added 108 packages from 40 contributors and audited 1723 packages in 14.505s 73 packages are looking for funding run `npm fund` for details found 0 vulnerabilities

      json-server creates an API based on a JavaScript object. The keys are the URL paths and the values are returned as a response. You store the JavaScript object locally and commit it to your source control.

      Open a file called db.json in the root of your application. This will be the JSON that stores the information you request from the API:

      Add an object with the key of list and an array of values with an id and a key of item. This will list the item for the grocery list. The key list will eventually give you a URL with an endpoint of /list:

      api-tutorial/db.json

      {
        "list": [
          { "id": 1, "item": "bread" },
          { "id": 2, "item": "grapes" }
        ]
      }
      

      In this snippet, you have hard-coded bread and grapes as a starting point for your grocery list.

      Save and close the file. To run the API server, you will use json-server from the command line with an argument point to the API configuration file. Add it as a script in your package.json.

      Open package.json:

      Then add a script to run the API. In addition, add a delay property. This will throttle the response, creating a delay between your API request and the API response. This will give you some insights into how the application will behave when waiting for a server response. Add a delay of 1500 milliseconds. Finally, run the API on port 3333 using the -p option so it won’t conflict with the create-react-app run script:

      api-tutorial/package.json

      {
        "name": "do-14-api",
        "version": "0.1.0",
        "private": true,
        "dependencies": {
          "@testing-library/jest-dom": "^4.2.4",
          "@testing-library/react": "^9.3.2",
          "@testing-library/user-event": "^7.1.2",
          "react": "^16.13.1",
          "react-dom": "^16.13.1",
          "react-scripts": "3.4.3"
        },
        "scripts": {
          "api": "json-server db.json -p 3333 --delay 1500",
          "start": "react-scripts start",
          "build": "react-scripts build",
          "test": "react-scripts test",
          "eject": "react-scripts eject"
        },
        "eslintConfig": {
          "extends": "react-app"
        },
        "browserslist": {
          "production": [
            ">0.2%",
            "not dead",
            "not op_mini all"
          ],
          "development": [
            "last 1 chrome version",
            "last 1 firefox version",
            "last 1 safari version"
          ]
        },
        "devDependencies": {
          "json-server": "^0.16.1"
        }
      }
      

      Save and close the file. In a new terminal or tab, start the API server with the following command:

      Keep this running during the rest of the tutorial.

      When you run the command, you will receive an output that lists the API resources:

      Output

      > json-server db.json -p 3333 {^_^}/ hi! Loading db.json Done Resources http://localhost:3333/list Home http://localhost:3333 Type s + enter at any time to create a snapshot of the database

      Open http://localhost:3333/list and you’ll find the live API:

      API results, 1

      When you open an endpoint in your browser, you are using the GET method. But json-server is not limited to the GET method. You can perform many other REST methods as well. For example, you can POST new items. In a new terminal window or tab, use curl to POST a new item with a type of application/json:

      • curl -d '{"item":"rice"}' -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -X POST http://localhost:3333/list

      Note that you must stringify the content before you send it. After running the curl command, you’ll receive a success message:

      Output

      { "item": "rice", "id": 3 }

      If you refresh the browser, the new item will appear:

      Updated content, 2

      The POST request will also update the db.json file. Be mindful of the changes, since there are no barriers to accidentally saving unstructured or unhelpful content as you work on your application. Be sure to check any changes before committing into version control.

      In this step, you created a local API. You learned how to create a static file with default values and how to fetch or update those values using RESTful actions such as GET and POST. In the next step, you’ll create services to fetch data from the API and to display in your application.

      Step 2 — Fetching Data from an API with useEffect

      In this step, you’ll fetch a list of groceries using the useEffect Hook. You’ll create a service to consume APIs in separate directories and call that service in your React components. After you call the service, you’ll save the data with the useState Hook and display the results in your component.

      By the end of this step, you’ll be able to call web APIs using the Fetch method and the useEffect Hook. You’ll also be able to save and display the results.

      Now that you have a working API, you need a service to fetch the data and components to display the information. Start by creating a service. You can fetch data directly inside any React component, but your projects will be easier to browse and update if you keep your data retrieval functions separate from your display components. This will allow you to reuse methods across components, mock in tests, and update URLs when endpoints change.

      Create a directory called services inside the src directory:

      Then open a file called list.js in your text editor:

      • nano src/services/list.js

      You’ll use this file for any actions on the /list endpoint. Add a function to retrieve the data using the fetch function:

      api-tutorial/src/services/list

      export function getList() {
        return fetch('http://localhost:3333/list')
          .then(data => data.json())
      }
      

      The only goal of this function is to access the data and to convert the response into JSON using the data.json() method. GET is the default action, so you don’t need any other parameters.

      In addition to fetch, there are other popular libraries such as Axios that can give you an intuitive interface and will allow you to add default headers or perform other actions on the service. But fetch will work for most requests.

      Save and close the file. Next, open App.css and add some minimal styling:

      • nano src/components/App/App.css

      Add a class of wrapper with a small amount of padding by replacing the CSS with the following:

      api-tutorial/src/components/App/App.css

      .wrapper {
          padding: 15px;
      }
      

      Save and close the file. Now you need to add in code to retrieve the data and display it in your application.

      Open App.js:

      • nano src/components/App/App.js

      In functional components, you use the useEffect Hook to fetch data when the component loads or some information changes. For more information on the useEffect Hook, check out How To Handle Async Data Loading, Lazy Loading, and Code Splitting with React. You’ll also need to save the results with the useState Hook.

      Import useEffect and useState, then create a variable called list and a setter called setList to hold the data you fetch from the service using the useState Hook:

      api-tutorial/src/components/App/App.js

      import React, { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
      import './App.css';
      
      function App() {
        const [list, setList] = useState([]);
        return(
          <>
          </>
        )
      }
      
      export default App;
      

      Next, import the service, then call the service inside your useEffect Hook. Update the list with setList if the component is mounted. To understand why you should check if the component is mounted before setting the data, see Step 2 — Preventing Errors on Unmounted Components in How To Handle Async Data Loading, Lazy Loading, and Code Splitting with React.

      Currently you are only running the effect once when the page loads, so the dependency array will be empty. In the next step, you’ll trigger the effect based on different page actions to ensure that you always have the most up-to-date information.

      Add the following highlighted code:

      api-tutorial/src/components/App/App.js

      
      import React, { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
      import './App.css';
      import { getList } from '../../services/list';
      
      function App() {
        const [list, setList] = useState([]);
      
        useEffect(() => {
         let mounted = true;
         getList()
           .then(items => {
             if(mounted) {
               setList(items)
             }
           })
         return () => mounted = false;
       }, [])
      
        return(
          <>
          </>
        )
      }
      
      export default App;
      

      Finally, loop over the items with .map and display them in a list:

      api-tutorial/src/components/App/App

      import React, { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
      import './App.css';
      import { getList } from '../../services/list';
      
      function App() {
        const [list, setList] = useState([]);
      
        useEffect(() => {
          let mounted = true;
          getList()
            .then(items => {
              if(mounted) {
                setList(items)
              }
            })
          return () => mounted = false;
        }, [])
      
        return(
          <div className="wrapper">
           <h1>My Grocery List</h1>
           <ul>
             {list.map(item => <li key={item.item}>{item.item}</li>)}
           </ul>
         </div>
        )
      }
      
      export default App;
      

      Save and close the file. When you do, the browser will refresh and you’ll find a list of items:

      List Items, 3

      In this step, you set up a service to retrieve data from an API. You learned how to call the service using the useEffect Hook and how to set the data on the page. You also displayed the data inside your JSX.

      In the next step, you’ll submit data to the API using POST and use the response to alert your users that an actions was successful.

      Step 3 — Sending Data to an API

      In this step, you’ll send data back to an API using the Fetch API and the POST method. You’ll create a component that will use a web form to send the data with the onSubmit event handler and will display a success message when the action is complete.

      By the end of this step, you’ll be able to send information to an API and you’ll be able to alert the user when the request resolves.

      Sending Data to a Service

      You have an application that will display a list of grocery items, but it’s not a very useful grocery app unless you can save content as well. You need to create a service that will POST a new item to the API.

      Open up src/services/list.js:

      • nano src/services/list.js

      Inside the file, add a function that will take an item as an argument and will send the data using the POST method to the API. As before, you can use the Fetch API. This time, you’ll need more information. Add an object of options as the second argument. Include the method—POST—along with headers to set the Content-Type to application/json. Finally, send the new object in the body. Be sure to convert the object to a string using JSON.stringify.

      When you receive a response, convert the value to JSON:

      tutorial/src/services/list.js

      export function getList() {
        return fetch('http://localhost:3333/list')
          .then(data => data.json())
      }
      
      export function setItem(item) {
       return fetch('http://localhost:3333/list', {
         method: 'POST',
         headers: {
           'Content-Type': 'application/json'
         },
         body: JSON.stringify({ item })
       })
         .then(data => data.json())
      }
      

      Save and close the file.

      Note: In production applications, you’ll need to add error handling and checking. For example, if you misspelled the endpoint, you’d still receive a 404 response and the data.json() method would return an empty object. To solve the issue, instead of converting the response to JSON, you could check the data.ok property. If it is falsy, you could throw an error and then use the .catch method in your component to display a failure message to the users.

      Now that you have created a service, you need to consume the service inside your component.

      Open App.js:

      • nano src/components/App/App.js

      Add a form element surrounding an input and a submit button:

      api-tutorial/src/components/App/App.js

      
      import React, { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
      import './App.css';
      import { getList } from '../../services/list';
      
      function App() {
        const [list, setList] = useState([]);
      
        useEffect(() => {
          let mounted = true;
          getList()
            .then(items => {
              if(mounted) {
                setList(items)
              }
            })
          return () => mounted = false;
        }, [])
      
        return(
          <div className="wrapper">
            <h1>My Grocery List</h1>
            <ul>
              {list.map(item => <li key={item.item}>{item.item}</li>)}
            </ul>
            <form>
             <label>
               <p>New Item</p>
               <input type="text" />
             </label>
             <button type="submit">Submit</button>
           </form>
          </div>
        )
      }
      
      export default App;
      

      Be sure to surround the input with a label so that the form is accessible by a screen reader. It’s also a good practice to add a type="submit" to the button so that it’s clear the role is to submit the form.

      Save the file. When you do, the browser will refresh and you’ll find your form.

      Grocery List Form

      Next, convert the input to a controlled component. You’ll need a controlled component so that you can clear the field after the user successfully submits a new list item.

      First, create a new state handler to hold and set the input information using the useState Hook:

      api-tutorial/src/components/App/App.js

      import React, { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
      import './App.css';
      import { getList } from '../../services/list';
      
      function App() {
        const [itemInput, setItemInput] = useState('');
        const [list, setList] = useState([]);
      
        useEffect(() => {
          let mounted = true;
          getList()
            .then(items => {
              if(mounted) {
                setList(items)
              }
            })
          return () => mounted = false;
        }, [])
      
        return(
          <div className="wrapper">
            <h1>My Grocery List</h1>
            <ul>
              {list.map(item => <li key={item.item}>{item.item}</li>)}
            </ul>
            <form>
              <label>
                <p>New Item</p>
                <input type="text" onChange={event => setItemInput(event.target.value)} value={itemInput} />
              </label>
              <button type="submit">Submit</button>
            </form>
          </div>
        )
      }
      
      export default App;
      

      After creating the state handlers, set the value of the input to itemInput and update the value by passing the event.target.value to the setItemInput function using the onChange event handler.

      Now your users can fill out a form with new list items. Next you will connect the form to your service.

      Create a function called handleSubmit. handleSubmit will take an event as an argument and will call event.preventDefault() to stop the form from refreshing the browser.

      Import setItem from the service, then call setItem with the itemInput value inside the handleSubmit function. Connect handleSubmit to the form by passing it to the onSubmit event handler:

      api-tutorial/src/components/App/App.js

      import React, { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
      import './App.css';
      import { getList, setItem } from '../../services/list';
      
      function App() {
        const [itemInput, setItemInput] = useState('');
        const [list, setList] = useState([]);
      
        useEffect(() => {
          let mounted = true;
          getList()
            .then(items => {
              if(mounted) {
                setList(items)
              }
            })
          return () => mounted = false;
        }, [])
      
        const handleSubmit = (e) => {
          e.preventDefault();
          setItem(itemInput)
        };
      
        return(
          <div className="wrapper">
            <h1>My Grocery List</h1>
            <ul>
              {list.map(item => <li key={item.item}>{item.item}</li>)}
            </ul>
            <form onSubmit={handleSubmit}>
              <label>
                <p>New Item</p>
                <input type="text" onChange={event => setItemInput(event.target.value)} value={itemInput} />
              </label>
              <button type="submit">Submit</button>
            </form>
          </div>
        )
      }
      
      export default App;
      

      Save the file. When you do, you’ll be able to submit values. Notice that you’ll receive a successful response in the network tab. But the list doesn’t update and the input doesn’t clear.

      Submit successful, 5

      Showing a Success Message

      It’s always a good practice to give the user some indication that their action was successful. Otherwise a user may try and resubmit a value multiple times or may think their action failed and will leave the application.

      To do this, create a stateful variable and setter function with useState to indicate whether to show a user an alert message. If alert is true, display an <h2> tag with the message Submit Successful.

      When the setItem promise resolves, clear the input and set the alert message:

      api-tutorial/src/components/App/App.js

      import React, { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
      import './App.css';
      import { getList, setItem } from '../../services/list';
      
      function App() {
        const [alert, setAlert] = useState(false);
        const [itemInput, setItemInput] = useState('');
        const [list, setList] = useState([]);
      
        useEffect(() => {
          let mounted = true;
          getList()
            .then(items => {
              if(mounted) {
                setList(items)
              }
            })
          return () => mounted = false;
        }, [])
      
        const handleSubmit = (e) => {
          e.preventDefault();
          setItem(itemInput)
            .then(() => {
              setItemInput('');
              setAlert(true);
            })
        };
      
        return(
          <div className="wrapper">
            <h1>My Grocery List</h1>
            <ul>
              {list.map(item => <li key={item.item}>{item.item}</li>)}
            </ul>
            {alert && <h2> Submit Successful</h2>}
            <form onSubmit={handleSubmit}>
              <label>
                <p>New Item</p>
                <input type="text" onChange={event => setItemInput(event.target.value)} value={itemInput} />
              </label>
              <button type="submit">Submit</button>
            </form>
          </div>
        )
      }
      
      export default App;
      

      Save the file. When you do, the page will refresh and you’ll see a success message after the API request resolves.

      Submit and message, 6

      There are many other optimizations you can add. For example, you may want to disable form inputs while there is an active request. You can learn more about disabling form elements in How To Build Forms in React.

      Now you have alerted a user that the result was successful, but the alert message doesn’t go away and the list doesn’t update. To fix this, start by hiding the alert. In this case, you’d want to hide the information after a brief period, such as one second. You can use the setTimeout function to call setAlert(false), but you’ll need to wrap it in useEffect to ensure that it does not run on every component render.

      Inside of App.js create a new effect and pass the alert to the array of triggers. This will cause the effect to run any time alert changes. Notice that this will run if alert changes from false to true, but it will also run when alert changes from true to false. Since you only want to hide the alert if it is displayed, add a condition inside the effect to only run setTimeout if alert is true:

      api-tutorial/src/components/App/App.js

      import React, { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
      import './App.css';
      import { getList, setItem } from '../../services/list';
      
      function App() {
        const [alert, setAlert] = useState(false);
        const [itemInput, setItemInput] = useState('');
        const [list, setList] = useState([]);
          ...
      
        useEffect(() => {
          if(alert) {
            setTimeout(() => {
              setAlert(false);
            }, 1000)
          }
        }, [alert])
      
        const handleSubmit = (e) => {
          e.preventDefault();
          setItem(itemInput)
            .then(() => {
              setItemInput('');
              setAlert(true);
            })
        };
      
        return(
          <div className="wrapper">
            ...
          </div>
        )
      }
      
      export default App;
      

      Run the setTimeout function after 1000 milliseconds to ensure the user has time to read the change.

      Save the file. Now you have an effect that will run whenever alert changes. If there is an active alert, it will start a timeout function that will close the alert after one second.

      Hide alert, 7

      Refreshing Fetched Data

      Now you need a way to refresh the stale list of data. To do this, you can add a new trigger to the useEffect Hook to rerun the getList request. To ensure you have the most relevant data, you need a trigger that will update anytime there is a change to the remote data. Fortunately, you can reuse the alert state to trigger another data refresh since you know it will run any time a user updates the data. As before, you have to plan for the fact that the effect will run every time alert changes including when the alert message disappears.

      This time, the effect also needs to fetch data when the page loads. Create a conditional that will exit the function before the data fetch if list.length is truthy—indicating you have already fetched the data—and alert is false—indicating you have already refreshed the data. Be sure to add alert and list to the array of triggers:

      import React, { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
      import './App.css';
      import { getList, setItem } from '../../services/list';
      
      function App() {
        const [alert, setAlert] = useState(false);
        const [itemInput, setItemInput] = useState('');
        const [list, setList] = useState([]);
      
        useEffect(() => {
          let mounted = true;
          if(list.length && !alert) {
            return;
          }
          getList()
            .then(items => {
              if(mounted) {
                setList(items)
              }
            })
          return () => mounted = false;
        }, [alert, list])
      
        ...
      
        return(
          <div className="wrapper">
            ...
          </div>
        )
      }
      
      export default App;
      

      Save the file. When you do, the data will refresh after you submit a new item:

      List Refresh, 8

      In this case, alert is not directly related to the list state. However, it does occur at the same time as an event that will invalidate the old data, so you can use it to refresh the data.

      Preventing Updates on Unmounted Components

      The last problem you need to account for is making sure you do not set state on an unmounted component. You have a solution to the problem with let mounted = true in your effect to fetch data, but the solution will not work for handleSubmit, since it is not an effect. You can’t return a function to set the value to false when it is unmounted. Further, it would be inefficient to add the same check to every function.

      To solve this problem, you can make a shared variable that is used by multiple functions by lifting mounted out of the useEffect Hook and holding it on the level of the component. You’ll still use the function to set the value to false at the end of the useEffect.

      Inside App.js, declare mounted at the start of the function. Then check if the component is mounted before setting data in the other asynchronous functions. Make sure to remove the mounted declaration inside the useEffect function:

      api-tutorial/src/components/App/App.js

      import React, { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
      import './App.css';
      import { getList, setItem } from '../../services/list';
      
      function App() {
        const [alert, setAlert] = useState(false);
        const [itemInput, setItemInput] = useState('');
        const [list, setList] = useState([]);
        let mounted = true;
      
        useEffect(() => {
          if(list.length && !alert) {
            return;
          }
          getList()
            .then(items => {
              if(mounted) {
                setList(items)
              }
            })
          return () => mounted = false;
        }, [alert, list])
      
        useEffect(() => {
          if(alert) {
            setTimeout(() => {
              if(mounted) {
                setAlert(false);
              }
            }, 1000)
          }
        }, [alert])
      
        const handleSubmit = (e) => {
          e.preventDefault();
          setItem(itemInput)
            .then(() => {
              if(mounted) {
                setItemInput('');
                setAlert(true);
              }
            })
        };
      
        return(
          <div className="wrapper">
            ...
          </div>
        )
      }
      
      export default App;
      

      When you make the change, you’ll receive an error in the terminal where you are running your React app:

      Error

      Assignments to the 'mounted' variable from inside React Hook useEffect will be lost after each render. To preserve the value over time, store it in a useRef Hook and keep the mutable value in the '.current' property. Otherwise, you can move this variable directly inside useEffect react-hooks/exhaustive-deps

      React is alerting you that variables are not stable. Whenever there is a re-render, it will recalculate the variable. Normally, this will ensure up-to-date information. In this case, you are relying on that variable to persist.

      The solution is another Hook called useRef. The useRef Hook will preserve a variable for the lifetime of the component. The only trick is to get the value you need to use the .current property.

      Inside App.js, convert mounted to a reference using the useRef Hook. Then convert each usage of mounted to mounted.current:

      api-tutorial/src/components/App/App.js

      import React, { useEffect, useRef, useState } from 'react';
      import './App.css';
      import { getList, setItem } from '../../services/list';
      
      function App() {
        const [alert, setAlert] = useState(false);
        const [itemInput, setItemInput] = useState('');
        const [list, setList] = useState([]);
        const mounted = useRef(true);
      
        useEffect(() => {
          mounted.current = true;
          if(list.length && !alert) {
            return;
          }
          getList()
            .then(items => {
              if(mounted.current) {
                setList(items)
              }
            })
          return () => mounted.current = false;
        }, [alert, list])
      
        useEffect(() => {
          if(alert) {
            setTimeout(() => {
              if(mounted.current) {
                setAlert(false);
              }
            }, 1000)
          }
        }, [alert])
      
        const handleSubmit = (e) => {
          e.preventDefault();
          setItem(itemInput)
            .then(() => {
              if(mounted.current) {
                setItemInput('');
                setAlert(true);
              }
            })
        };
      
        return(
          <div className="wrapper">
             ...
          </div>
        )
      }
      
      export default App;
      

      In addition, be cautious about setting the variable in the cleanup function for useEffect. The cleanup function will always run before the effect reruns. That means that the cleanup function () => mounted.current = false will run every time the alert or list change. To avoid any false results, be sure to update the mounted.current to true at the start of the effect. Then you can be sure it will only be set to false when the component is unmounted.

      Save and close the file. When the browser refreshes, you’ll be able to save new list items:

      Saving again, 9

      Note: It is a common problem to accidentally rerun an API multiple times. Every time a component is removed and then remounted, you will rerun all the original data fetching. To avoid this, consider a caching method for APIs that are particularly data heavy or slow. You can use anything from memoizing the service calls, to caching with service workers, to a custom Hook. There are a few popular custom Hooks for caching service calls, including useSWR and react query.

      No matter which approach you use, be sure to consider how you will invalidate the cache because there are times where you’ll want to fetch the newest data.

      In this step, you sent data to an API. You learned how to update the user when the data is submitted and how to trigger a refresh on your list data. You also avoided setting data on unmounted components by using the useRef Hook to store the status of the component so that it can be used by multiple services.

      Conclusion

      APIs give you the ability to connect to many useful services. They allow you to store and retrieve data even after a user closes their browser or stops using an application. With well organized code, you can isolate your services from your components so that your components can focus on rendering data without knowing where the data is originating. Web APIs extend your application far beyond the capabilities of a browser session or storage. They open your application to the whole world of web technologies.

      If you would like to read more React tutorials, check out our React Topic page, or return to the How To Code in React.js series page.



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      Replacing Component Lifecycles with the useEffect Hook, in React


      Introduction

      React Hooks are revolutionizing the way we develop in React and solving some of our biggest concerns. The useEffect Hook allows us to replace repetitive component lifecycle code.

      Essentially, a Hook is a special function that allows you to “hook into” React features. Hooks are a great solution if you’ve previously written a functional component and realize that you need to add state to it.

      If you’re new to Hooks and would like an overview, check out the introduction to React Hooks.

      This article assumes that you’re familiar with the useState Hook. If you’re not, never fear! If you spend a little time with Convert a React Class-Based Component to a Functional One Using a State Hook you’ll be on the right track!

      About useEffect

      useEffect is short for ‘use side effect’. Effects are when our application reacts with the outside world, like working with an API. It allows us to run a function based on whether something changed. useEffect also allows us to combine componentDidMount and componentDidUpdate.

      About Our App

      We’ll be taking some prewritten class-based code and converting it to a functional component. We’ll be using reactstrap to simplify our formatting and axios to call an external dummy API.

      Specifically, we’re using jsonplaceholder to pull-in dummy user data on our initial component mount.

      Starter Code

      Then we are triggering the component to re-render based on a user click and pulling in additional data about the users.

      Starter Code, clicked

      Getting Started

      Just clone over the repo with the starting code:

      $ git clone https://github.com/alligatorio/use-effect-hook
      $ npm i
      $ npm start
      

      Take a moment to familiarize yourself with the code, in particular, the ClassBasedComponent.js file.

      You’ll notice that we have two lifecycle methods in this file, componentDidMount and componentDidUpdate.

      async componentDidMount() {
        const response = await axios
          .get(`https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/users`);
      
        this.setState({ users: response.data });
      };
      
      async componentDidUpdate(prevProps) {
        if (prevProps.resource !== this.props.resource) {
          const response = await axios
            .get(`https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/users`);
      
          this.setState({ users: response.data });
        }
      };
      

      These are both async lifecycle methods that call the jsonplaceholder API to bring in a list of users.

      In componentDidMount, we say on first render, get the user data. Next, on componentDidUpdate we look to see if anything has changed in props. This can be triggered from user initiated events, like in our example, a button press. Once the change is detected we say, go out and get the data again.

      We would like to condense the lifecycle methods into the useEffect Hook and create a function-based component.

      Create a Component

      Rather than using the same ClassBasedComponent.js file, create a new file called FunctionBasedComponent.js. We’re creating a new file so that we can contrast and compare the two.

      In your terminal, you can run the following to create the new file from your root directory:

      $ touch FunctionBasedComponent.js
      

      To help get started, copy and paste the code below into your new file:

      import React, { useState, useEffect } from 'react';
      import { Container, Button, Row } from 'reactstrap';
      import axios from 'axios';
      
      const FunctionBasedComponent = () => {
        return (
          <Container className="user-list">
            <h1>My Contacts:</h1>
          </Container>
        )
      };
      
      export default FunctionBasedComponent;
      

      Now hop over to your App.js file, import your FunctionBasedComponent.js file and replace ClassBasedComponent with FunctionBasedComponent.

      Your app should now look something like the screenshot below.

      our starting useEffect app


      Let’s start by initializing state with useState.

      const [ users, setUsers ] = useState([]);
      const [ showDetails, setShowDetails ] = useState(false);
      

      To quickly recap on useState, to initialize state with the useState hook, we declare both our variable and the function that corresponds to the variable in an array and then we pass useState() the argument that we’d like to initialize our variable with.

      • The users state variable is initialized with an empty array and given the function of setUsers.
      • The showDetails state variable is initialized with the value of false and assigned the function of setShowDetails.

      Add an API Call

      Let’s go ahead and add in our API call as the fetchUsers function.

      const fetchUsers = async () => {
        const response = await axios.get(`https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/users`);
      
        setUsers(response.data);
      };
      

      We are essentially pulling this async call from the former componentDidMount and componentDidUpdate functions.

      Keep in mind we cannot use an async function directly inside useEffect. If we ever want to call an async function, we need to define the function outside of useEffect and then call it within useEffect.

      The useEffect Argument

      Let’s talk about the useEffect hook for a moment. Much like componentDidMount, useEffect will immediately call our function.

      useEffect( () => {}, [ 'value' ]);
      

      By default, useEffect looks to see if the array values are different and if they are different, the arrow function is automatically called.

      useEffect( () => {}, [ 'different value' ]);
      

      Let’s flip back to our code editor and add the useEffect hook below our latest function where we will call fetchUsers.

      In the code below, we’re looking at the users object to see if there are changes.

      useEffect( () => { fetchUsers(users) }, [ users ] );
      

      Common Issues

      • If you don’t pass an array into the useEffect Hook, your component will continuously reload repeatedly.
      useEffect( () => { fetchUsers(users) } );
      
      • If you pass an empty array, we are not watching any variables, and therefore it will only update state on the first render, exactly like componentDidMount.
      useEffect( () => { fetchUsers(users) }, [] );
      
      • Every time we create an object in JavaScript, it is a different object in memory. Though the code below looks the same, the page will be re-rendered because each object is stored in a different memory address. The same logic applies for arrays.
      useEffect( () => { fetchUsers(users) }, [{ user: 'Alli Alligator' }] );
      

      Is not equal to!

      useEffect( () => { fetchUsers(users) }, [{ user: 'Alli Alligator' }] );
      
      • useEffect function must return a cleanup function or nothing.

      To demonstrate triggering another re-render, copy and paste the code below into your FunctionBasedComponent.js file:

      import React, { useState, useEffect } from 'react';
      import { Container, Button, Row } from 'reactstrap';
      import axios from 'axios';
      
      const FunctionBasedComponent = () => {
        const [ users, setUsers ] = useState([]);
        const [ showDetails, setShowDetails ] = useState(false);
      
        const fetchUsers = async () => {
          const response = await axios.get(`https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/users`);
      
          setUsers(response.data);
        };
      
        useEffect( () => { fetchUsers(users) }, [ users ] );
      
        const handleClick = event => { setShowDetails(!showDetails) };
      
        return (
          <Container>
            {
              users.map((user) => (
                <ul key={ user.id }>
                  <li>
                    <strong>{ user.name }</strong>
                    <div>
                      <Button
                        onClick={ handleClick }
                      >
                        { showDetails ? "Close Additional Info" : "More Info"  }
                    </Button>
                     { showDetails &&
                       <Container className="additional-info">
                         <Row>
                           { `Email: ${ user.email }` }
                         </Row>
                         <Row>
                           { `Phone: ${ user.phone }` }
                         </Row>
                         <Row>
                           { `Website: ${ user.website }` }
                         </Row>
                       </Container>
                     }
                    </div>
                  </li>
                </ul>
              ))
            }
          </Container>
        )
      }
      
      export default FunctionBasedComponent;
      

      Now we have an onClick event within a button. On the button click, the state of showDetails is changed, triggering a re-render that will call again to the API and bring in the additional details that we need.

      Voilà!

      async componentDidMount() {
          const response = await axios.get(`https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/users`)
          this.setState({ users: response.data })
      };
      
      async componentDidUpdate(prevProps) {
        if (prevProps.resource !== this.props.resource) {
          const response = await axios.get(`https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/users`)
          this.setState({ users: response.data })
        }
      };
      

      Becomes:

      const fetchUsers = async () => {
        const response = await axios.get(`https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/users`);
      
        setUsers(response.data);
      };
      
      useEffect( () => { fetchUsers(users) }, [ users ] );
      



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