While you could want to use outside functions for organization or reusability, it stills seems to go against the structure of functional components, at least for one reason: in functional components, states are immutable. So they normally are constants. And while your 2 functions seem to be somewhat similar, they differ greatly, precisely regarding this specific feature. Take for example this code:
const a = 2;
function increment(){
return ++a;
}
increment();
This is obviously forbidden, you cannot change a constant.
Write it differently:
const a = 2;
function increment(a){
return ++a;
}
increment(a);
The last one is allowed. It won't give the result you expect, at least looking at it rapidly, but it'll compile and won't have any runtime error.
Transpose this to your example. Let's say that you begin by wanting to simply output yourt counter with toFixed(2), so you create an outside function. But then afterwards you decide that over 5 you want to reset the counter. So you do this:
const counterAsFloat = (counter) => {
if(counter > 5){
counter = 0;
}
return counter.toFixed(2);
};
This is going to be allowed, will compile and run. It' won't give the expected result, but it won't be obvious. The inside function could work:
const counterAsFloat = () => {
if(counter > 5){
counter = 0;
}
return counter.toFixed(2);
};
But because in the inside scope counter is a constant you're going to have a compile error or at least a runtime error. That you can quickly fix by replacing counter = 0;
by setCounter(0);
which is the proper way to handle this requirement.
So in the end, by staying inside your component, it is clearer what the state values are and you're going to have clearer feedback on forbidden manipulations that may be be less obvious with outside functions.
See example with outside function, it is working but doesn't give you the expected result:
const counterAsFloatOutside = (counter) => {
if(counter > 5){
counter = 0;
}
return counter.toFixed(2);
};
function Counter() {
const [counter, setCounter] = React.useState(0);
return (
<div className="counter">
<h1>{counterAsFloatOutside(counter)}</h1>
<button onClick={() => setCounter(counter + 1)}>
Increment
</button>
</div>
);
}
ReactDOM.render(React.createElement(Counter, null), document.body);
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://unpkg.com/react@16/umd/react.development.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://unpkg.com/react-dom@16/umd/react-dom.development.js"></script>
With the inside function, it's just not working, which in this case, is preferable. Working with any compiling tool will even give you the error upfront, which is a huge advantage:
function Counter() {
const [counter, setCounter] = React.useState(0);
const counterAsFloat = () => {
if(counter > 5){
counter = 0;
}
return counter.toFixed(2);
};
return (
<div className="counter">
<h1>{counterAsFloat()}</h1>
<button onClick={() => setCounter(counter + 1)}>
Increment
</button>
</div>
);
}
ReactDOM.render(React.createElement(Counter, null), document.body);
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://unpkg.com/react@16/umd/react.development.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://unpkg.com/react-dom@16/umd/react-dom.development.js"></script>