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React 16 Tooling

You're reading from  React 16 Tooling

Product type Book
Published in Apr 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788835015
Pages 298 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Adam Boduch Adam Boduch
Profile icon Adam Boduch
Christopher Pitt Christopher Pitt
Profile icon Christopher Pitt
View More author details

Table of Contents (18) Chapters

Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
1. Creating a Personalized React Development Ecosystem 2. Efficiently Bootstrapping React Applications with Create React App 3. Development Mode and Mastering Hot Reloading 4. Optimizing Test-Driven React Development 5. Streamlining Development and Refactoring with Type-Safe React Components 6. Enforcing Code Quality to Improve Maintainability 7. Isolating Components with Storybook 8. Debugging Components in the Browser 9. Instrumenting Application State with Redux 10. Building and Deploying Static React Sites with Gatsby 11. Building and Deploying React Applications with Docker Containers 1. Another Book You May Enjoy Index

Profiling component performance


Profiling the performance of your React components is made easier by React Developer Tools. It makes it easier to spot updates that cause elements to re-render when no re-render is actually necessary. It also makes it easier to collect the amount of CPU time that a given component spends, and where it spends it during its lifespan.

Although React Developer Tools does not include any memory profile tooling, we'll look at how you can use the existing memory developer tool to specifically profile for React elements.

Removing reconciliation work

Reconciliation is what happens when a React element is rendered. It first computes the virtual DOM tree that will render the element's current state and props. Then, this tree is compared to the existing tree for the element, assuming it has been rendered at least once already. The reason that React does this is because reconciling changes like this in JavaScript, before interacting with the DOM, is more performant. DOM interactions...

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