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Is there a systematic approach to debug what is causing a component to re-render in React? I put a simple console.log() to see how many time it renders, but am having trouble figuring out what is causing the component to render multiple times i.e (4 times) in my case. Is there a tool that exists that shows a timeline and/or all components tree renders and order?

4

8 Answers 8

483

If you want a short snippet without any external dependencies I find this useful

componentDidUpdate(prevProps, prevState) {
  Object.entries(this.props).forEach(([key, val]) =>
    prevProps[key] !== val && console.log(`Prop '${key}' changed`)
  );
  if (this.state) {
    Object.entries(this.state).forEach(([key, val]) =>
      prevState[key] !== val && console.log(`State '${key}' changed`)
    );
  }
}

Here is a small hook I use to trace updates to function components

function useTraceUpdate(props) {
  const prev = useRef(props);
  useEffect(() => {
    const changedProps = Object.entries(props).reduce((ps, [k, v]) => {
      if (prev.current[k] !== v) {
        ps[k] = [prev.current[k], v];
      }
      return ps;
    }, {});
    if (Object.keys(changedProps).length > 0) {
      console.log('Changed props:', changedProps);
    }
    prev.current = props;
  });
}

// Usage
function MyComponent(props) {
  useTraceUpdate(props);
  return <div>{props.children}</div>;
}
9
  • 6
    @yarden.refaeli I see no reason to have an if block. Short and concise.
    – Isaac
    Nov 5, 2018 at 15:46
  • 2
    Along with this, if you find a piece of state is being updated and it isn't obvious where or why, you can override the setState method (in a class component) with setState(...args) { super.setState(...args) } and then set a breakpoint in your debugger which you will then be able to trace back to the function setting the state.
    – redbmk
    Apr 26, 2019 at 17:04
  • 1
    How exactly do I use the hook function? Where exactly am I supposed to call useTraceUpdate after I've defined it as you wrote it?
    – damon
    Jul 25, 2019 at 16:50
  • 1
    @DawsonB you probably don't have any state in that component, so this.state is undefined.
    – Jacob Rask
    Aug 21, 2019 at 13:09
  • 9
    I defined useTraceUpdate and I used it in my function component. But it does not detect that props changed. And component still renders twice (I put console.log("call!") inside of it and I get two printouts in browser's console. What else can I do?
    – Marecky
    May 11, 2021 at 5:58
286
+350

You can check the reason for a component's (re)render with the React Devtools profiler tool. No changing of code necessary. See the react team's blog post Introducing the React Profiler.

First, go to settings cog > profiler, and select "Record why each component rendered"

React Dev Tools > Settings

Screenshot of React Devtools profiler

7
  • 6
    Firefox Link: addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/react-devtools
    – Akaisteph7
    Jul 13, 2021 at 21:41
  • 3
    For obvious reasons this should be the accepted answer as it lets you profile with ease and pinpoint the cause without creating ugly scripts within the codebase. Mar 3, 2022 at 13:41
  • 5
    One thing that led me to use a script similar to stackoverflow.com/a/51082563 is the fact that the React DevTools don't show the differences between the 'old' and 'new' props when the reason for a render is "Props Changed". Many times that won't matter, but when the props are values, it can help to see what's causing the re-render. It's also great for seeing why hooks are running again. Mar 30, 2022 at 15:08
  • 8
    this does not work as expected as it does not show renders because of parent component renders, and also it almost always does not show the reason for the re-redner Jan 24 at 14:58
  • 4
    How do we figure out which hook or which context changed? Just saying hook changed or context changed isn't very helpful.
    – darKnight
    Aug 14 at 16:45
91

Here are some instances that a React component will re-render.

  • Parent component rerender
  • Calling this.setState() within the component. This will trigger the following component lifecycle methods shouldComponentUpdate > componentWillUpdate > render > componentDidUpdate
  • Changes in component's props. This will trigger componentWillReceiveProps > shouldComponentUpdate > componentWillUpdate > render > componentDidUpdate (connect method of react-redux trigger this when there are applicable changes in the Redux store)
  • calling this.forceUpdate which is similar to this.setState

You can minimize your component's rerender by implementing a check inside your shouldComponentUpdate and returning false if it doesn't need to.

Another way is to use React.PureComponent or stateless components. Pure and stateless components only re-render when there are changes to it's props.

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  • 10
    Nitpick: "stateless" just means any component that doesn't use state, whether it's defined with class syntax or functional syntax. Also, functional components always re-render. You need to either use shouldComponentUpdate, or extend React.PureComponent, to enforce only re-rendering on change. Dec 6, 2016 at 21:24
  • 1
    You're right about the stateless/functional component always re-renders. Will update my answer. Dec 6, 2016 at 21:46
  • 1
    So even if you use the functional way of creating your component e.g. const MyComponent = (props) => <h1>Hello {props.name}</h1>;(that's a stateless component). It will re-render whenever the parent component re-renders. Dec 6, 2016 at 22:02
  • 2
    This is great answer for sure, but it do not answer the real question, - How to trace what triggered a re-render. Answer of Jacob R looks promising in giving the answer to real problem.
    – Sanuj
    Feb 19, 2019 at 5:11
  • 1
    What also causes rerender is any changes in the context consumer when implemented via useContext-hook instead of <SomeContext.Consumer>... .
    – elMeroMero
    Oct 30, 2020 at 10:36
12

@jpdelatorre's answer is great at highlighting general reasons why a React component might re-render.

I just wanted to dive a little deeper into one instance: when props change. Troubleshooting what is causing a React component to re-render is a common issue, and in my experience a lot of the times tracking down this issue involves determining which props are changing.

React components re-render whenever they receive new props. They can receive new props like:

<MyComponent prop1={currentPosition} prop2={myVariable} />

or if MyComponent is connected to a redux store:

function mapStateToProps (state) {
  return {
    prop3: state.data.get('savedName'),
    prop4: state.data.get('userCount')
  }
}

Anytime the value of prop1, prop2, prop3, or prop4 changes MyComponent will re-render. With 4 props it is not too difficult to track down which props are changing by putting a console.log(this.props) at that beginning of the render block. However with more complicated components and more and more props this method is untenable.

Here is a useful approach (using lodash for convenience) to determine which prop changes are causing a component to re-render:

componentWillReceiveProps (nextProps) {
  const changedProps = _.reduce(this.props, function (result, value, key) {
    return _.isEqual(value, nextProps[key])
      ? result
      : result.concat(key)
  }, [])
  console.log('changedProps: ', changedProps)
}

Adding this snippet to your component can help reveal the culprit causing questionable re-renders, and many times this helps shed light on unnecessary data being piped into components.

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  • 3
    It's now called UNSAFE_componentWillReceiveProps(nextProps) and it's deprecated. "This lifecycle was previously named componentWillReceiveProps. That name will continue to work until version 17." From the React documentation. Jan 30, 2019 at 19:19
  • 1
    You can achieve the same with componentDidUpdate, which is arguably better anyway, since you're only wanting to find out what caused a component to actually update. Oct 29, 2019 at 23:02
8

Strange nobody has given that answer but I find it very useful, especially since the props changes are almost always deeply nested.

Hooks fanboys:

import deep_diff from "deep-diff";
const withPropsChecker = WrappedComponent => {
  return props => {
    const prevProps = useRef(props);
    useEffect(() => {
      const diff = deep_diff.diff(prevProps.current, props);
      if (diff) {
        console.log(diff);
      }
      prevProps.current = props;
    });
    return <WrappedComponent {...props} />;
  };
};

"Old"-school fanboys:

import deep_diff from "deep-diff";
componentDidUpdate(prevProps, prevState) {
      const diff = deep_diff.diff(prevProps, this.props);
      if (diff) {
        console.log(diff);
      }
}

P.S. I still prefer to use HOC(higher order component) because sometimes you have destructured your props at the top and Jacob's solution doesn't fit well

Disclaimer: No affiliation whatsoever with the package owner. Just clicking tens of times around to try to spot the difference in deeply nested objects is a pain in the.

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  • 2
    To save others some googling: npm deep-diff, deep-diff source at github. (The source link is the "repository" link on the npm page.) Nov 16, 2020 at 21:43
  • 1
    Best to use ref comparison when determining whether the prop value changed. React uses reference comparison for props, so if you had two different instances of ['a'], deep_diff would report them as unchanged, but React would say they changed. No problem using deep_diff for the logging output, though.
    – rpggio
    Feb 22, 2022 at 23:12
7

Thanks to https://stackoverflow.com/a/51082563/2391795 answer, I've come up with this slightly different solution for Functional components only (TypeScript), which also handles states and not only props.

import {
  useEffect,
  useRef,
} from 'react';

/**
 * Helps tracking the props changes made in a react functional component.
 *
 * Prints the name of the properties/states variables causing a render (or re-render).
 * For debugging purposes only.
 *
 * @usage You can simply track the props of the components like this:
 *  useRenderingTrace('MyComponent', props);
 *
 * @usage You can also track additional state like this:
 *  const [someState] = useState(null);
 *  useRenderingTrace('MyComponent', { ...props, someState });
 *
 * @param componentName Name of the component to display
 * @param propsAndStates
 * @param level
 *
 * @see https://stackoverflow.com/a/51082563/2391795
 */
const useRenderingTrace = (componentName: string, propsAndStates: any, level: 'debug' | 'info' | 'log' = 'debug') => {
  const prev = useRef(propsAndStates);

  useEffect(() => {
    const changedProps: { [key: string]: { old: any, new: any } } = Object.entries(propsAndStates).reduce((property: any, [key, value]: [string, any]) => {
      if (prev.current[key] !== value) {
        property[key] = {
          old: prev.current[key],
          new: value,
        };
      }
      return property;
    }, {});

    if (Object.keys(changedProps).length > 0) {
      console[level](`[${componentName}] Changed props:`, changedProps);
    }

    prev.current = propsAndStates;
  });
};

export default useRenderingTrace;

Note the implementation itself hasn't changed much. The documentation shows how to use it for both props/states and the component is now written in TypeScript.

2
  • 1
    Works great. Would be nice if this was published as little npm package.
    – nachtigall
    May 31, 2021 at 11:21
  • Yeah, someday maybe if I find the time! :D Would probably use TSDX as starter. May 31, 2021 at 21:33
6

Using hooks and functional components, not just prop change can cause a rerender. What I started to use is a rather manual log. It helped me a lot. You might find it useful too.

I copy this part in the component's file:

const keys = {};
const checkDep = (map, key, ref, extra) => {
  if (keys[key] === undefined) {
    keys[key] = {key: key};
    return;
  }
  const stored = map.current.get(keys[key]);

  if (stored === undefined) {
    map.current.set(keys[key], ref);
  } else if (ref !== stored) {
    console.log(
      'Ref ' + keys[key].key + ' changed',
      extra ?? '',
      JSON.stringify({stored}).substring(0, 45),
      JSON.stringify({now: ref}).substring(0, 45),
    );
    map.current.set(keys[key], ref);
  }
};

At the beginning of the method I keep a WeakMap reference:

const refs = useRef(new WeakMap());

Then after each "suspicious" call (props, hooks) I write:

const example = useExampleHook();
checkDep(refs, 'example ', example);
3

The above answers are very helpful, just in case if anyone is looking for a specfic method to detect the cause of rerender then I found this library redux-logger very helpful.

What you can do is add the library and enable diffing between state(it is there in the docs) like:

const logger = createLogger({
    diff: true,
});

And add the middleware in the store.

Then put a console.log() in the render function of the component you want to test.

Then you can run your app and check for console logs.Wherever there is a log just before it will show you difference between state (nextProps and this.props) and you can decide if render is really needed thereenter image description here

It will similar to above image along with the diff key.

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