Loading React hooks using dynamic imports?
As you say it, there are two ways to go about using lazy loaded hooks:
- Load library in a Parent Component, conditionally render Component using library when available
Something along the lines of
let lib
const loadLib = () => {...}
const Component = () => {
const {...hooks} = lib
...
}
const Parent = () => {
const [loaded, setLoaded] = useState(false)
useEffect(() => loadComponent().then(() => setLoaded(true)), [])
return loaded && <Component/>
}
This method is indeed a little hacky and a lot of manual work for each library
- Start loading a component using the hook, fail, reconstruct the component when the hook is loaded
This can be streamlined with the help of React.Suspense
<Suspense fallback={"Loading..."}>
<ComponentWithLazyHook/>
</Suspense>
Suspense works similar to Error Boundary like follows:
- Component throws a Promise during rendering (via React.lazy or manually)
- Suspense catches that Promise and renders Fallback
- Promise resolves
- Suspense re-renders the component
This way is likely to get more popular when Suspense for Data Fetching matures from experimental phase.
But for our purposes of loading a library once, and likely caching the result, a simple implementation of data fetching can do the trick
const cache = {}
const errorsCache = {}
// <Suspense> catches the thrown promise
// and rerenders children when promise resolves
export const useSuspense = (importPromise, cacheKey) => {
const cachedModule = cache[cacheKey]
// already loaded previously
if (cachedModule) return cachedModule
//prevents import() loop on failed imports
if (errorsCache[cacheKey]) throw errorsCache[cacheKey]
// gets caught by Suspense
throw importPromise
.then((mod) => (cache[cacheKey] = mod))
.catch((err) => {
errorsCache[cacheKey] = err
})
};
const SuspendedComp = () => {
const { useForm } = useSuspense(import("react-hook-form"), "react-hook-form")
const { register, handleSubmit, watch, errors } = useForm()
...
}
...
<Suspense fallback={null}>
<SuspendedComp/>
</Suspense>
You can see a sample implementation here.
Edit:
As I was writing the example in codesandbox, it completely escaped me that dependency resolution will behave differently than locally in webpack.
Webpack import()
can't handle completely dynamic paths like import(importPath)
. It must have import('react-hook-form')
somewhere statically, to create a chunk at build time.
So we must write import('react-hook-form')
ourselves and also provide the importPath = 'react-hook-form'
to use as a cache key.
I updated the codesanbox example to one that works with webpack, the old example, which won't work locally, can be found here