When to use React "componentDidUpdate" method?
A simple example would be an app that collects input data from the user and then uses Ajax to upload said data to a database. Here's a simplified example (haven't run it - may have syntax errors):
export default class Task extends React.Component {
constructor(props, context) {
super(props, context);
this.state = {
name: "",
age: "",
country: ""
};
}
componentDidUpdate() {
this._commitAutoSave();
}
_changeName = (e) => {
this.setState({name: e.target.value});
}
_changeAge = (e) => {
this.setState({age: e.target.value});
}
_changeCountry = (e) => {
this.setState({country: e.target.value});
}
_commitAutoSave = () => {
Ajax.postJSON('/someAPI/json/autosave', {
name: this.state.name,
age: this.state.age,
country: this.state.country
});
}
render() {
let {name, age, country} = this.state;
return (
<form>
<input type="text" value={name} onChange={this._changeName} />
<input type="text" value={age} onChange={this._changeAge} />
<input type="text" value={country} onChange={this._changeCountry} />
</form>
);
}
}
So whenever the component has a state
change it will autosave the data. There are other ways to implement it too. The componentDidUpdate
is particularly useful when an operation needs to happen after the DOM is updated and the update queue is emptied. It's probably most useful on complex renders
and state
or DOM changes or when you need something to be the absolutely last thing to be executed.
The example above is rather simple though, but probably proves the point. An improvement could be to limit the amount of times the autosave can execute (e.g max every 10 seconds) because right now it will run on every key-stroke.
I made a demo on this fiddle as well to demonstrate.
For more info, refer to the official docs:
componentDidUpdate()
is invoked immediately after updating occurs. This method is not called for the initial render.Use this as an opportunity to operate on the DOM when the component has been updated. This is also a good place to do network requests as long as you compare the current props to previous props (e.g. a network request may not be necessary if the props have not changed).
Sometimes you might add a state value from props in constructor or componentDidMount, you might need to call setState when the props changed but the component has already mounted so componentDidMount will not execute and neither will constructor; in this particular case, you can use componentDidUpdate since the props have changed, you can call setState in componentDidUpdate with new props.
I have used componentDidUpdate()
in highchart.
Here is a simple example of this component.
import React, { PropTypes, Component } from 'react';
window.Highcharts = require('highcharts');
export default class Chartline extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
chart: ''
};
}
public componentDidUpdate() {
// console.log(this.props.candidate, 'this.props.candidate')
if (this.props.category) {
const category = this.props.category ? this.props.category : {};
console.log('category', category);
window.Highcharts.chart('jobcontainer_' + category._id, {
title: {
text: ''
},
plotOptions: {
series: {
cursor: 'pointer'
}
},
chart: {
defaultSeriesType: 'spline'
},
xAxis: {
// categories: candidate.dateArr,
categories: ['Day1', 'Day2', 'Day3', 'Day4', 'Day5', 'Day6', 'Day7'],
showEmpty: true
},
labels: {
style: {
color: 'white',
fontSize: '25px',
fontFamily: 'SF UI Text'
}
},
series: [
{
name: 'Low',
color: '#9B260A',
data: category.lowcount
},
{
name: 'High',
color: '#0E5AAB',
data: category.highcount
},
{
name: 'Average',
color: '#12B499',
data: category.averagecount
}
]
});
}
}
public render() {
const category = this.props.category ? this.props.category : {};
console.log('render category', category);
return <div id={'jobcontainer_' + category._id} style={{ maxWidth: '400px', height: '180px' }} />;
}
}