useMemo vs. useEffect + useState
Are there any benefits in using useMemo
(e.g. for an intensive function call) instead of using a combination of useEffect
and useState
?
Here are two custom hooks that work exactly the same on first sight, besides useMemo
's return value being null
on the first render:
useEffect & useState
import { expensiveCalculation } from "foo";
function useCalculate(someNumber: number): number {
const [result, setResult] = useState<number>(null);
useEffect(() => {
setResult(expensiveCalculation(someNumber));
}, [someNumber]);
return result;
}
useMemo
import { expensiveCalculation } from "foo";
function useCalculateWithMemo(someNumber: number): number {
return useMemo(() => {
return expensiveCalculation(someNumber);
}, [someNumber]);
};
Both calculate the result each time their parameter someNumber
changes, where is the memoization of useMemo
kicking in?
The useEffect
and setState
will cause extra renders on every change: the first render will "lag behind" with stale data and then it'll immediately queue up an additional render with the new data.
Suppose we have:
function expensiveCalculation(x) { return x + 1; }; // Maybe I'm running this on a literal potato
Lets suppose someNumber
is initially 0:
- The
useMemo
version immediately renders1
. - The
useEffect
version rendersnull
, then after the component renders the effect runs, changes the state, and queues up a new render with1
.
Then if we change someNumber
to 2:
- The
useMemo
runs and3
is rendered. - The
useEffect
version runs, and renders1
again, then the effect triggers and the component reruns with the correct value of3
.
In terms of how often expensiveCalculation
runs, the two have identical behavior, but the useEffect
version is causing twice as much rendering which is bad for performance for other reasons.
Plus, the useMemo
version is just cleaner and more readable, IMO. It doesn't introduce unnecessary mutable state and has fewer moving parts.
So you're better off just using useMemo
here.
I think there are two main points you should consider when choosing between them.
- Time when function called.
useEffect
called after component has been rendered, so you can access DOM from it. For example, this is important if you want to access DOM elements via refs.
- Semantic guarantees.
useEffect
guarantees that it will not be fired if dependencies have not changed. useMemo
does not give such guarantees.
As stated in the React documentation, you should consider useMemo as pure optimization technique. Your program should continue to work correctly even if you replace useMemo with regular function call.
useEffect
+ useState
can be used to control updates. Even to break-up circular dependencies and prevent infinite update loops.