This has happened to me a few times. I have always managed to work around the issue, yet I am still intrigued to understand why this happens, and what I have missed.
Essentially if I have a condition within my render
method which specifies the class for my div
:
let divClass = this.state.renderCondition ? 'red' : 'blue';
By default I set renderCondition
within my state to false.
If I then define an onClick
handler on a button (as follows), and click the button, whilst render IS called, the DOM is NOT updated. That is to say the class does not change.
onClickCompile: function() {
this.setState({renderCondition: true}, function() {
synchronousSlowFunction();
});
}
This seems to have something to do with running slow synchronous code in that if the code is quick and simple the DOM IS updated appropriately.
If I wrap the call to synchronousSlowFunction
in a 500 millisecond timeout, everything works as expected. I would however like to understand what I have misunderstood such that I do not need this hack.
Can you share the button onClick code? I might be wrong but this looks like an incorrectly set button onClick listener.
Make sure that onClick callback is defined without (), i.e.
<button onClick={this.something} />
instead of:
<button onClick={this.something()} />
Post more code so we can get a better (bigger) picture
synchronousSlowFunction is as you mentioned synchronous. This means, that it blocks your component while it is running. That means, that react cannot update your component, because it has to wait for the callback function to complete until it can call render with the updated values. The setTimeout wrap makes the call asynchronous, so that react can render/update your component, while the function is doing its work. It is not the time delay, that makes it work but simply the callback, which is not render blocking. You could also wrap in in a Promise or make the slow function async to prevent render blocking.
Try something Like this:
this.setState((state) => ({
...state, renderCondition: true
}));
Maybe you're doing another setState for renderCondition some where the code above should fix such things.
or maybe try using PureComponent
import React, { PureComponent } from 'react'
export default class TablePreferencesModal extends PureComponent {
render() {
return (
<div>
</div>
)
}
}