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When to use React setState callback

When a react component state changes, the render method is called. Hence for any state change, an action can be performed in the render methods body. Is there a particular use case for the setState callback then?

It is currently unclear what you are asking. Can you include some code?
The setState callback is for anything you want to do after the state has DEFINITELYbeen changed. Since setState is async, if you want to call a fx and be SURE that the new state is loaded then that's what the callback is for
The use case for setState callback is quite clear. You use it when you want a function to run after a SPECIFIC state has been updated. If you put this function in render() instead, it will run every time ANY state is updated, which is probably not what you want. This will also make your code less readable and logical.

s
smfoote

Yes there is, since setState works in an asynchronous way. That means after calling setState the this.state variable is not immediately changed. so if you want to perform an action immediately after setting state on a state variable and then return a result, a callback will be useful

Consider the example below

....
changeTitle: function changeTitle (event) {
  this.setState({ title: event.target.value });
  this.validateTitle();
},
validateTitle: function validateTitle () {
  if (this.state.title.length === 0) {
    this.setState({ titleError: "Title can't be blank" });
  }
},
....

The above code may not work as expected since the title variable may not have mutated before validation is performed on it. Now you may wonder that we can perform the validation in the render() function itself but it would be better and a cleaner way if we can handle this in the changeTitle function itself since that would make your code more organised and understandable

In this case callback is useful

....
changeTitle: function changeTitle (event) {
  this.setState({ title: event.target.value }, function() {
    this.validateTitle();
  });

},
validateTitle: function validateTitle () {
  if (this.state.title.length === 0) {
    this.setState({ titleError: "Title can't be blank" });
  }
},
....

Another example will be when you want to dispatch and action when the state changed. you will want to do it in a callback and not the render() as it will be called everytime rerendering occurs and hence many such scenarios are possible where you will need callback.

Another case is a API Call

A case may arise when you need to make an API call based on a particular state change, if you do that in the render method, it will be called on every render onState change or because some Prop passed down to the Child Component changed.

In this case you would want to use a setState callback to pass the updated state value to the API call

....
changeTitle: function (event) {
  this.setState({ title: event.target.value }, () => this.APICallFunction());
},
APICallFunction: function () {
  // Call API with the updated value
}
....

I understand that it is asynchronous in nature. My question was is there something specific that only the setState callback can be used for that perhaps the render methods body may not support( Something apart from let's say better code readability.)
@SahilJain Validation is the correct example, you wont want to handle it in the render() function because then it will be called everytime you make any change in the render() you would want to call it only when only the input changes and hence in the function itself
React forbids to change the state during the render.. So its right to put the validation into the callback.
if (this.title.length === 0) { should be this.state.title.length, right?
First use case is probably not a good idea. setState callbacks trigger after re-render, so you're causing a double render for no good reason. This is exactly the purpose of the function argument (updater). You can just run setState(state => state.title.length ? { titleError: "Title can't be blank" } : null) and the change will stack. No double renders necessary.
j
johnny 5
this.setState({
    name:'value' 
},() => {
    console.log(this.state.name);
});

Thank you for this code snippet, which might provide some limited, immediate help. A proper explanation would greatly improve its long-term value by showing why this is a good solution to the problem, and would make it more useful to future readers with other, similar questions. Please edit your answer to add some explanation, including the assumptions you've made.
When you want call a function after the state changed you can use the method.
what if you wants set multiple porperties of state like name, firstname etc?
not available for react hook useState
w
webdeb

The 1. usecase which comes into my mind, is an api call, which should't go into the render, because it will run for each state change. And the API call should be only performed on special state change, and not on every render.

changeSearchParams = (params) => {
  this.setState({ params }, this.performSearch)
} 

performSearch = () => {
  API.search(this.state.params, (result) => {
    this.setState({ result })
  });
}

Hence for any state change, an action can be performed in the render methods body.

Very bad practice, because the render-method should be pure, it means no actions, state changes, api calls, should be performed, just composite your view and return it. Actions should be performed on some events only. Render is not an event, but componentDidMount for example.


A
Aniket Jha

Consider setState call

this.setState({ counter: this.state.counter + 1 })

IDEA

setState may be called in async function

So you cannot rely on this. If the above call was made inside a async function this will refer to state of component at that point of time but we expected this to refer to property inside state at time setState calling or beginning of async task. And as task was async call thus that property may have changed in time being. Thus it is unreliable to use this keyword to refer to some property of state thus we use callback function whose arguments are previousState and props which means when async task was done and it was time to update state using setState call prevState will refer to state now when setState has not started yet. Ensuring reliability that nextState would not be corrupted.

Wrong Code: would lead to corruption of data

this.setState(
   {counter:this.state.counter+1}
 );

Correct Code with setState having call back function:

 this.setState(
       (prevState,props)=>{
           return {counter:prevState.counter+1};
        }
    );

Thus whenever we need to update our current state to next state based on value possed by property just now and all this is happening in async fashion it is good idea to use setState as callback function.

I have tried to explain it in codepen here CODE PEN


A
Abdul Azeem

Sometimes we need a code block where we need to perform some operation right after setState where we are sure the state is being updated. That is where setState callback comes into play

For example, there was a scenario where I needed to enable a modal for 2 customers out of 20 customers, for the customers where we enabled it, there was a set of time taking API calls, so it looked like this

async componentDidMount() {
  const appConfig = getCustomerConfig();
  this.setState({enableModal: appConfig?.enableFeatures?.paymentModal }, async 
   ()=>{
     if(this.state.enableModal){
       //make some API call for data needed in poput
     }
  });
}

enableModal boolean was required in UI blocks in the render function as well, that's why I did setState here, otherwise, could've just checked condition once and either called API set or not.