Awesome
Hooks’ Macro :umbrella:
Babel Macros for React Hooks automatic memoization invalidation.
Features
-
Extracts all references used, and adds them to the inputs array.
-
Favors strict correctness over performance, but uses safe optimizations:
-
skips constants and useless memoization keys;
-
traverses all functions called or referenced, and appends their dependencies too, removing the need for unnecessary
useCallback
hooks.
-
-
By lowering the bar for high correctness, strives to:
-
make the use of
useAutoMemo
anduseAutoCallback
simple and applicable in many more contests; -
reduce the overhead of modifying an input’s semantics (for example from a constant to a prop);
-
reduce to the bare minimum cases of missed inputs — and therefore stale memoizations or effects.
-
-
Thoroughly tested: 50+ test cases and 100% code coverage.
Roadmap
- Create a debug/trace facility to help debugging stale cache, performance issues.
- Create a escape hatch to signal that a reference should not be part of the inputs array.
- Identify a rule where we can safely add property accesses to the inputs array. Very important when dealing with refs (
ref.current
). -
Bail out on actual constants (such as primitive literals)Update: Done! - Warn/error on known non-invariant values (such as literal objects or arrays) — or auto-
useAutoMemo
them! - Create a
auto()
generic macro to be used with other hooks and APIs with the same signature.
Installation
Requires babel-plugin-macros
, which is already configured for you if you are using Create React App v2+.
npm install --dev hooks.macro
yarn add --dev hooks.macro
Usage
Replace:
import { useMemo } from 'react';
function MyComponent({ labels }) {
const myComputation = useMemo(
() => labels.map(label => label.toUpperCase()),
[labels],
);
}
With:
import { useAutoMemo } from 'hooks.macro';
function MyComponent({ labels }) {
const myComputation = useAutoMemo(() =>
labels.map(label => label.toUpperCase()),
);
}
Or even:
import { useAutoMemo } from 'hooks.macro';
function MyComponent({ labels }) {
const myComputation = useAutoMemo(labels.map(label => label.toUpperCase()));
}
Full reference
useAutoMemo
Exactly like React’s useMemo
but automatically identifies value dependencies.
Can be passed a factory function or directly a value, will convert the latter to a function for you.
import { useAutoMemo } from 'hooks.macro';
useAutoMemo(value);
useAutoMemo(() => value);
Both become:
useMemo(() => value, [value]);
useAutoCallback
Exactly like React’s useCallback
but automatically identifies value dependencies.
import { useAutoCallback } from 'hooks.macro';
useAutoCallback(() => {
doSomethingWith(value);
});
Becomes:
useCallback(() => {
doSomethingWith(value);
}, [doSomethingWith, value]);
useAutoEffect
, useAutoLayoutEffect
They work exactly like their standard React counterpart, but they automatically identify value dependencies.
import { useAutoEffect, useAutoLayoutEffect } from 'hooks.macro';
useAutoEffect(() => {
doSomethingWith(value);
});
Becomes:
useEffect(() => {
doSomethingWith(value);
}, [doSomethingWith, value]);
Limitations
To make this work I currently needed to pose some limitations. This could change in the future (PR very welcome).
-
Only variables created in the scope of the component body are automatically trapped as value dependencies.
-
Only variables, and not properties’ access, are trapped. This means that if you use
obj.prop
only[obj]
will become part of the memoization invalidation keys. This is a problem for refs, and will be addressed specifically in a future release.You can work around this limitation by creating a variable which holds the current value, such as
const { current } = ref
. -
Currently there’s no way to add additional keys for more fine grained cache invalidation. Could be an important escape hatch when you do nasty things, but in that case I’d prefer to use
useMemo
/useCallback
directly. -
Only locally defined functions declarations and explicit function expressions (
let x = () => {}
) are traversed for indirect dependencies — all other function calls (such asxxx()
) are treated as normal input dependencies and appended too. This is unnecessary (but not harmful) for setters coming fromuseState
, and not an issue at all if the function is the result ofuseCallback
oruseAutoCallback
.
Inspiration
React documentation about useMemo
and use*Effect
hooks cites: (emphasis mine)
The array of inputs is not passed as arguments to the function. Conceptually, though, that’s what they represent: every value referenced inside the effect function should also appear in the inputs array. In the future, a sufficiently advanced compiler could create this array automatically.
This project tries to cover exactly that: to create the inputs array automatically.
License
MIT