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45 lines
1.4 KiB
Markdown
45 lines
1.4 KiB
Markdown
# Pairing A Callback With A useState Hook
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React's Class-based state management allowed you to update the state of your
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component with a call to `this.setState()`. The first argument represents the
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changes to the state. It also accepts a second argument; a callback that will
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be invoked after the state has been updated.
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```javascript
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this.setState({ loading: true }, () => console.log("Loading..."));
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```
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If you've transitioned to Hooks-based state management, then you may have
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noticed that the updaters generated by `useState` calls do not accept a second
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callback argument.
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If you want to update state and fire a callback in response to it, you can pair
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`useState` with `useEffect`.
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```javascript
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import React, { useState, useEffect } from "react";
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function App() {
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const [loading, setLoading] = useState(false);
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const toggleLoading = () => setLoading(prevLoading => !prevLoading);
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useEffect(() => {
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if(loading) {
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console.log("We are loading now");
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}
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}, [loading])
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return (
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<div>
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{loading && <p>Loading...</p>}
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<button onClick={toggleLoading}>{loading ? "Cancel" : "Save"}</button>
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</div>
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);
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}
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```
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The `useState` acts on its own. It has no side-effects. We follow it with a
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`useEffect` that responds to changes to the value of `loading` -- this is where
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our _callback_ gets invoked.
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See a [live example](https://codesandbox.io/s/clever-roentgen-kvzze).
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