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Useeffect

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useEffect Tutorial

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๐ŸŽ‰ A Beginner's Guide to useEffect

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Welcome to the world of React Hooks! Today, we'll dive into one of the most popular hooks: useEffect. Don't worry, we'll make it fun and easy to understand. So, let's get started! ๐Ÿš€

example

Change the image size by using the click-and-scroll function.

๐Ÿ“š What is useEffect

useEffect is a React Hook that allows you to perform side effects in your functional components. Side effects are actions that happen outside of your component, like fetching data, updating the DOM, or subscribing to events. With useEffect, you can manage these side effects without writing a class or function. ๐ŸŽ‰

๐Ÿงช How useEffect works

useEffect is like a Swiss Army knife ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ”ช for side effects in your functional components. It combines the functionality of componentDidMount, componentDidUpdate, and componentWillUnmount from class components into one simple hook.

Here's how it works:

  1. You call useEffect with a function that contains your side effect.
  2. React runs your side effect function after rendering the component.
  3. If you provide a cleanup function, React will call it when the component is unmounted or when the dependencies change.

No need to write a class or function! ๐Ÿคฏ

โšก Different use cases

Let's explore some common use cases for useEffect:

  1. Fetching data: You can use useEffect to fetch data from an API and update your component's state when the data is received. ๐Ÿ“ฆ
  2. Updating the document title: Want to change the title of your webpage based on the component's state? useEffect to the rescue! ๐Ÿฆธโ€โ™‚๏ธ
  3. Setting up event listeners: Need to listen for events like window resizing or keyboard input? useEffect can help you set up and clean up event listeners. ๐ŸŽง
  4. Persisting state: Want to save your component's state to local storage or a database? useEffect can handle that too! ๐Ÿ’พ
  5. Timers and intervals: If you need to set up a timer or interval in your component, useEffect is the perfect tool for the job. You can start the timer when the component mounts and clear it when the component unmounts. โณ

๐Ÿ“ Examples of useEffect use cases ๐Ÿ“

Example 1: Fetching data

  • Strucutre
FetchData
โ”œโ”€โ”€ button.tsx
โ”œโ”€โ”€ location.tsx
โ”œโ”€โ”€ weather.tsx

button.tsx

import React, { useState, useEffect } from "react";
import fetchWeatherData from "./weather"; // Import the function to fetch weather data
 
interface WeatherProps {
    location: string;
}
 
const WeatherButtons: React.FC<WeatherProps> = ({ location }) => {
    const [weatherData, setWeatherData] = useState<any>(null); // Create state to hold weather data and initialize it to null
    const [requestType, setRequestType] = useState<string>(""); // Create state to hold the type of request to make and initialize it to an empty string
 
    useEffect(() => {
        if (requestType) { // If a request type has been selected
            fetchWeatherData(location, requestType).then((data: any) => // Call the function to fetch weather data
                setWeatherData(data) // Set the weather data to the response from the API
            );
        }
    }, [requestType, location]); // Run the effect when either request type or location changes
 
    return (
        <div className="text-2xl">
            <button
                className="weather-current-weather-button"
                onClick={() => setRequestType("current")} // When the button is clicked, set the request type to "current"
            >
                Current Weather
            </button>
            {weatherData && ( // If weather data exists
                <div className="weather-json-bg">
          <pre className="weather-button-pre-wrap">
            {JSON.stringify(weatherData, null, 2)} // Display the weather data as JSON
          </pre>
                </div>
            )}
        </div>
    );
};
 
export default WeatherButtons;
 
 

This component renders a button that fetches weather data from the API when clicked. It has the following features:

  • It imports the useState and useEffect hooks from React, and the fetchWeatherData function from weather.tsx.
  • It receives the location prop from its parent component, which specifies the city for which weather data should be fetched.
  • It defines two state variables using the useState hook: weatherData, which stores the fetched weather data, and requestType, which determines what type of weather data to fetch (e.g., current weather, 5-day forecast).
  • It uses the useEffect hook to fetch weather data from the API when requestType changes (i.e., when the button is clicked), and update the weatherData state variable with the fetched data.
  • It renders a button with an onClick event that sets the requestType state variable to "current" (i.e., fetch current weather data).
  • If weatherData is not null, it renders a pre tag that displays the fetched data in JSON format.

location.tsx

import React, { createContext, useState } from "react";
 
export const LocationContext = createContext<any>(null); // Create a context object to hold location data
 
export const LocationProvider: React.FC = ({ children }) => { // Create a provider component for the context
    const [location, setLocation] = useState<string>("New York"); // Create state to hold the current location and initialize it to "New York"
 
    const changeLocation = (newLocation: string) => {
        setLocation(newLocation); // Function to update the location
    };
 
    return (
        <LocationContext.Provider value={{ location, changeLocation }}>
            {children}
        </LocationContext.Provider>
    );
};
 
 
 

This component creates a context that stores the current location for which weather data should be fetched. It has the following features:

  • It imports the createContext and useState hooks from React.
  • It creates a LocationContext using the createContext hook, which is used to pass the location state variable and changeLocation function to child components.
  • It defines a LocationProvider component using the useState hook, which sets the initial location state variable to "New York".
  • It defines a changeLocation function that updates the location state variable with a new location.
  • It renders the LocationContext.Provider component with the location state variable and changeLocation function as its value, and its child components as its children. weather.tsx
const fetchWeatherData = async (
  location: string,
  requestType: string
): Promise<any> => {
  const apiKey = process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_WEATHER ?? ""; // Get the API key from the environment variables
  const apiUrl = `https://api.openweathermap.org/data/2.5/weather?q=${location}&appid=${apiKey}`; // Construct the API URL using the location and API key
 
  const response = await fetch(apiUrl); // Make a request to the API
  const data = await response.json(); // Parse the response as JSON
  return data; // Return the data
};
 
export default fetchWeatherData;
 

This component defines a function that fetches weather data from the OpenWeatherMap API using the provided location and requestType parameters. It has the following features:

  • It defines an async function called fetchWeatherData that takes in location and requestType parameters.
  • It gets the API key from an environment variable called NEXT_PUBLIC_WEATHER.
  • It constructs the API URL using the location and apiKey variables, and uses fetch to make a GET request to the API.
  • It uses the json method of the response object to convert the response to a JavaScript object.
  • It returns the fetched data as a Promise.

How to use

import WeatherButtons from "../components/react/useEffect/FetchData/button";
import { LocationProvider } from "../components/react/useEffect/FetchData/location";
 
<LocationProvider>
  <WeatherButtons
    location="London"
    units="metric"
    theme="dark"
  />
</LocationProvider>

To use these components, you can import WeatherButtons and LocationProvider into your own React component and wrap WeatherButtons inside LocationProvider. You can then pass in the desired location (and optionally, units and theme) props to WeatherButtons. When the button is clicked, the weather data for the specified location will be fetched and displayed in JSON format.

Example 2 - UserFetchData

UserFetch
โ”œโ”€โ”€ Data.tsx
โ”œโ”€โ”€ UserFetch.tsx
 

Data.tsx

import React, { useEffect, useState } from "react";
 
// Define the shape of the data object that will be returned by the hook
type Data<T> = {
  status: "loading" | "success" | "error";
  data?: T;
  error?: Error;
};
 
// Custom hook that fetches data from an API endpoint and returns the data object
export function useFetch<T>(url: string): Data<T> {
  // Create a state variable called 'data' and initialize it with { status: "loading" }
  const [data, setData] = useState<Data<T>>({ status: "loading" });
 
  // useEffect hook that runs when the URL changes
  useEffect(() => {
    // Define an asynchronous function called 'fetchData'
    const fetchData = async () => {
      try {
        // Fetch data from the API endpoint
        const response = await fetch(url);
        const result = await response.json();
 
        // Update the 'data' state variable with the fetched data
        setData({ status: "success", data: result });
      } catch (error) {
        // Update the 'data' state variable with the error object
        setData({ status: "error", error: error as Error });
      }
    };
 
    // Call the 'fetchData' function to fetch data from the API endpoint
    fetchData();
  }, [url]); // Only run the effect when the url changes
 
  // Return the 'data' object
  return data;
}
  1. The Data type defines the shape of the data object that will be returned by the useFetch hook. It contains three properties: status, data, and error.
  2. The useFetch function takes a URL as its parameter and returns the data object that was defined earlier.
  3. Within the useFetch function, useState is used to create a state variable data and its initial state is set to { status: "loading" }.
  4. useEffect is used to fetch the data from the API endpoint. It runs only when the URL changes because [url] is passed as its second argument.
  5. Inside the useEffect function, fetchData is an asynchronous function that uses try and catch blocks to fetch the data from the API endpoint. If the fetch is successful, the setData function is called with { status: "success", data: result }. If there is an error, the setData function is called with { status: "error", error: error as Error }.
  6. Finally, useFetch returns the data object.

UserFetch.tsx

import React, { useState } from "react";
import { useFetch } from "./Data";
 
function UsersFetch() {
  // Create a state variable called 'url' and initialize it with the API endpoint URL
  const [url, setUrl] = useState("https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/users");
 
  // Call the 'useFetch' hook with the 'url' state variable
  const data = useFetch<Array<{ id: number; name: string }>>(url);
 
  // Render a button that changes the 'url' state variable when clicked
  return (
    <div>
      <button
        className="user-fetch-button"
        onClick={() => setUrl(url + "?_limit=5")}
      >
        Fetch only 5 users
      </button>
      {/* If the 'status' property of the 'data' object is 'loading', render a loading message */}
      {data.status === "loading" && <p>Loading...</p>}
      {/* If the 'status' property of the 'data' object is 'success', render a list of users */}
      {data.status === "success" && (
        <ul className="user-fetch-data-bg">
          {data.data?.map((user) => (
            <li key={user.id}>{user.name}</li>
          ))}
        </ul>
      )}
      {/* If the 'status' property of the 'data' object is 'error', render an error message */}
      {data.status === "error" && <p>Error: {data.error?.message}</p>}
    </div>
  );
}
 
export default UsersFetch;
  1. The UsersFetch function is a React component that uses the useFetch hook to fetch data from an API endpoint and render it.
  2. The component uses useState to create a state variable url with an initial value of "https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/users".
  3. The data variable is assigned the result of calling the useFetch hook with url.
  4. A button is rendered that calls setUrl with a new URL when clicked.
  5. The component renders different content depending on the status property of the data object.
  6. If status is "loading", the component renders a loading message.
  7. If status is "success", the component renders a list of users with their names.
  8. If status is "error", the component renders an error message with the error object's message.

Example 3 - Widget

Widget
โ”œโ”€โ”€ ColorWidget.tsx
โ”œโ”€โ”€ Widget.tsx

Widget.tsx

// This function creates a new widget element with the specified background color and adds it to the provided container element.
export function createWidget(color: string, container: HTMLElement) {
    // Create a new div element to serve as the widget.
    const widget = document.createElement("div");
    // Set the widget's background color.
    widget.style.background = color;
    // Set the widget's width and height.
    widget.style.width = "100px";
    widget.style.height = "100px";
    // Set the widget's border radius.
    widget.style.borderRadius = "25%";
    // Set the widget's margin.
    widget.style.margin = "10px";
    // Set the widget's border style and color.
    widget.style.border = "2px solid pink";
 
    // Create a new custom event to be dispatched periodically by the widget.
    const statusChangeEvent = new CustomEvent("statusChange", {
        detail: { status: "active" },
    });
 
    // Set an interval to dispatch the statusChangeEvent every 1000 milliseconds (1 second).
    setInterval(() => {
        widget.dispatchEvent(statusChangeEvent);
    }, 1000);
 
    // Add the widget to the container element.
    container.appendChild(widget);
 
    // Return an object with functions to add and remove event listeners, as well as to destroy the widget.
    return {
        addEventListener: widget.addEventListener.bind(widget),
        removeEventListener: widget.removeEventListener.bind(widget),
        destroy: () => container.removeChild(widget),
    };
}
 
  • Line 1: Define a function called createWidget that takes two arguments color (string) and container (HTMLElement).
  • Line 2-9: Create a new div element with the provided color, set its size, shape, margin, and border.
  • Line 11-15: Create a new custom event called statusChangeEvent with a detail property containing { status: "active" }.
  • Line 17-20: Dispatch the statusChangeEvent every second.
  • Line 22: Append the widget to the container.
  • Line 24-29: Return an object that has three properties: addEventListener, removeEventListener, and destroy.

ColorWidget.tsx

import React, { useEffect, useRef, useState } from "react";
import { createWidget } from "./Widget";
 
interface ColorWidgetProps {
    initialColor: string;
}
 
const ColorWidget: React.FC<ColorWidgetProps> = ({ initialColor }) => {
    // useRef hook to create a reference to the container div element
    const containerRef = useRef<HTMLDivElement>(null);
 
    // useState hook to create a state variable for the color of the widget
    const [color, setColor] = useState(initialColor);
 
    // useEffect hook to run side-effects when the component mounts or the color state changes
    useEffect(() => {
        // Get the current value of the container reference
        const container = containerRef.current;
 
        // If the container exists, create a widget and add event listeners to it
        if (container) {
            // Create the widget with the given color and container
            const widget = createWidget(color, container);
 
            // Define a function to handle the "statusChange" event of the widget
            const handleStatusChange = (event: CustomEvent<{ status: string }>) => {
                console.log("The status is:", event.detail.status);
            };
 
            // Add an event listener to the widget to listen for "statusChange" events
            (widget as any).addEventListener("statusChange", handleStatusChange);
 
            // Return a cleanup function to remove the widget and event listeners when the component unmounts or the color changes
            return () => {
                widget.destroy();
                (widget as any).removeEventListener("statusChange", handleStatusChange);
            };
        }
    }, [color]);
 
    // Define a function to update the color state variable with a random hex color
    const changeColor = () => {
        setColor(
            `#${Math.floor(Math.random() * 0x1000000)
                .toString(16)
                .padStart(6, "0")}`
        );
    };
 
    // Render the ColorWidget component with a container div, a button to change the color, and the color widget itself
    return (
        <div className="color-widget">
            <div className="widget-container" ref={containerRef}></div>
            <button className="widget-button" onClick={changeColor}>
                Change Color
            </button>
        </div>
    );
};
 
export default ColorWidget;
 
  • Line 1-8: Import necessary dependencies and define an interface for ColorWidgetProps.
  • Line 10-18: Define a functional component called ColorWidget that takes initialColor as a prop and returns some JSX.
  • Line 19: Create a reference using useRef to store a reference to a div element.
  • Line 21-23: Define a state called color using useState and initialize it with initialColor.
  • Line 25-47: Use useEffect to create a widget using createWidget, add an event listener to it, and clean up the widget and event listener when the color changes or the component is unmounted.
  • Line 33-39: Define a function called changeColor that generates a random hexadecimal color and sets it as the new color.
  • Line 42-46: Return some JSX that contains a div with a ref to the container reference, a button with an onClick event handler that calls changeColor, and some CSS classes for styling.

Example 4 - Conditional Effect ConditionalEffect.tsx

import React, { useState, useEffect } from "react";
 
export const ConditionalEffect: React.FC = () => {
    // state variables for count and message
    const [count, setCount] = useState(0);
    const [message, setMessage] = useState("");
 
    // useEffect hook that runs whenever count changes
    useEffect(() => {
        // check if count is even or odd
        if (count % 2 === 0) {
            // set message to "Even" if count is even
            setMessage("Even");
        } else {
            // set message to "Odd" if count is odd
            setMessage("Odd");
        }
    }, [count]);
 
    // render the component with a button that increments count on click
    // also display the current message and count value
    return (
        <div>
            <button
                className="conditional-effect-button"
                onClick={() => setCount(count + 1)}
            >
                Conditional Effect
            </button>
            <p className="conditional-effect-text">{message}</p>
            <p className="conditional-effect-text">Count: {count}</p>
        </div>
    );
};
 
  • import React, { useState, useEffect } from "react";: imports React and the useState and useEffect hooks from the react library.
  • const [count, setCount] = useState(0);: declares a state variable count using the useState hook with an initial value of 0 and a function setCount that allows us to update the count variable.
  • const [message, setMessage] = useState("");: declares a state variable message using the useState hook with an initial value of an empty string and a function setMessage that allows us to update the message variable.
  • useEffect(() => {...}, [count]);: defines an effect that runs whenever the count state variable changes. If count is even, message is set to "Even", otherwise it is set to "Odd".
  • <button className="conditional-effect-button" onClick={() => setCount(count + 1)}>Conditional Effect</button>: renders a button with a click handler that updates the count state variable when clicked.
  • <p className="conditional-effect-text">{message}</p>: renders the value of message.
  • <p className="conditional-effect-text">Count: {count}</p>: renders the value of count.

Example 5 - Timer Effect Timer.tsx

import React, { useState, useEffect } from "react";
 
export const Timer: React.FC = () => {
    // Set the initial state of seconds to 0 using useState hook
    const [seconds, setSeconds] = useState(0);
 
    useEffect(() => {
        // Set an interval to increment seconds state by 1 every 1000ms using setInterval
        const interval = setInterval(() => {
            setSeconds((seconds) => seconds + 1);
        }, 1000);
 
        // Clear the interval using clearInterval in the cleanup function
        return () => {
            clearInterval(interval);
        };
    }, []); // Effect only runs once (empty dependency array)
 
    return (
        <div>
            <p className="timer-text">
                You have been on this page for {seconds} seconds.
            </p>
        </div>
    );
};
  • import React, { useState, useEffect } from "react";: Import the necessary React components.
  • const [seconds, setSeconds] = useState(0);: Declare a state variable seconds and its corresponding updater function setSeconds, initialized to 0.
  • useEffect(() => {...}, []);: Use the useEffect hook to execute a side effect after the initial render and run cleanup before unmount. The dependency array is empty, so the effect will only run once after the initial render.
  • const interval = setInterval(() => {...}, 1000);: Set an interval to increment the seconds state by 1 every second.
  • setSeconds((seconds) => seconds + 1);: Update the seconds state with the updater function to increment its value by 1.
  • return () => {...};: Return a cleanup function to clear the interval when the component is unmounted.
  • <p className="timer-text">You have been on this page for {seconds} seconds.</p>: Render a paragraph element that displays the seconds state variable.

Example 6 - Update Title UpdateTitle.tsx

import React, { useEffect, useState } from "react";
 
export function UpdateTItle() {
    const [count, setCount] = useState(0); // create a state variable 'count' and its update function 'setCount' with an initial value of 0
 
    useEffect(() => {
        // This is a side effect that runs when the component mounts, and whenever 'count' changes
        // It updates the document title with the current count
        document.title = `You clicked ${count} times`;
    }, [count]); // Only run the effect when 'count' changes
 
    return (
        <div>
            <p className="update-title-text">You clicked {count} times</p>
            <button
                className="update-title-button"
                onClick={() => setCount(count + 1)}
            >
                Click me
            </button>
        </div>
    );
}
 
  • The code defines a React functional component called UpdateTitle.
  • The component initializes a state variable count with an initial value of 0, and its corresponding update function setCount.
  • The useEffect hook is used to create a side effect that runs when the component mounts and whenever count changes.
  • Inside the effect, the document title is updated with the current value of count interpolated into a string.
  • The useEffect hook takes an array of dependencies as its second argument. When any of the dependencies change, the effect will run again. In this case, the effect only depends on count, so it will only run when count changes.
  • The component returns a div containing a paragraph element that displays the current value of count, and a button that updates count when clicked.

That's it! Now you have a solid understanding of useEffect and how it can help you manage state in your React functional components. Happy coding! ๐ŸŽ‰