2.0 KiB
id | title | permalink | layout | category |
---|---|---|---|---|
faq-state | Component State | docs/faq-state.html | docs | FAQ |
What does setState do?
setState()
schedules an update to a component's state
object. When state changes, the component responds by re-rendering.
Why is setState
is giving me the wrong value?
Calls to setState
are asynchronous - don't rely on this.state
to reflect the new value immediately after calling setState
. Pass an updater function instead of an object if you need compute values based on the current state (see below for details).
Example of code that will not behave as expected:
incrementCount = () => {
this.setState({count: this.state.count + 1})
}
handleSomething() {
// this.state.count is 1, then we do this:
this.incrementCount()
this.incrementCount() // state wasn't updated yet, so this sets 2 not 3
}
See below for how to fix this problem.
How do I update state with values that depend on the current state?
Pass a function instead of an object to setState to ensure the call always uses the most updated version of state (see below).
What is the difference between passing an object or a function in setState?
Passing an update function allows you to access the current state value inside the updater. Since setState
calls are batched, this lets you chain updates and ensure they build on top of each other instead of conflicting:
incrementCount = () => {
this.setState((prevState) => {
return {count: prevState.count + 1}
})
}
handleSomething() {
// this.state.count is 1, then we do this:
this.incrementCount()
this.incrementCount() // count is now 3
}
Should I use a state management library like Redux or MobX?
It's a good idea to get to know React first, before adding in additional libraries. You can build quite complex applications using only React.