How to avoid bind or inline arrow functions inside render method

How to avoid this way of binding inside render method or what are the alternatives of this?

If you care about re-rendering then shouldComponentUpdate and PureComponent are your friends and they will help you optimize rendering.

You have to extract "Child" component from the "Parent" and pass always the same props and implement shouldComponentUpdate or use PureComponent. What we want is a case when we remove a child, other children shouldn't be re-rendered.

Example

import React, { Component, PureComponent } from 'react';
import { render } from 'react-dom';

class Product extends PureComponent {
  render() {
    const { id, name, onDelete } = this.props;

    console.log(`<Product id=${id} /> render()`);
    return (
      <li>
        {id} - {name}
        <button onClick={() => onDelete(id)}>Delete</button>
      </li>
    );
  }
}

class App extends Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);

    this.state = {
      products: [
        { id: 1, name: 'Foo' },
        { id: 2, name: 'Bar' },
      ],
    };

    this.handleDelete = this.handleDelete.bind(this);
  }

  handleDelete(productId) {
    this.setState(prevState => ({
      products: prevState.products.filter(product => product.id !== productId),
    }));
  }

  render() {
    console.log(`<App /> render()`);
    return (
      <div>
        <h1>Products</h1>
        <ul>
          {
            this.state.products.map(product => (
              <Product 
                key={product.id}
                onDelete={this.handleDelete}
                {...product}
              />
            ))
          }
        </ul>
      </div>
    ); 
  }
}

render(<App />, document.getElementById('root'));

Demo: https://codesandbox.io/s/99nZGlyZ

Expected behaviour

  • <App /> render()
  • <Product id=1... render()
  • <Product id=2... render()

When we remove <Product id=2 ... only <App /> is re-rendered.

  • render()

To see those messages in demo, open the dev tools console.

The same technique is used and described in article: React is Slow, React is Fast: Optimizing React Apps in Practice by François Zaninotto.


First: A simple solution will be to create a component for the content inside a map function and pass the values as props and when you call the function from the child component you can pass the value to the function passed down as props.

Parent

deleteTodo = (val) => {
    console.log(val)
}
todos.map(el => 
    <MyComponent val={el} onClick={this.deleteTodo}/> 

)

MyComponent

class MyComponent extends React.Component {
    deleteTodo = () => {
        this.props.onClick(this.props.val);
    }
    render() {
       return <div  onClick={this.deleteTodo}> {this.props.val} </div>
    }
}

Sample snippet

class Parent extends React.Component {
     _deleteTodo = (val) => {
        console.log(val)
    }
    render() {
        var todos = ['a', 'b', 'c'];
        return (
           <div>{todos.map(el => 
             <MyComponent key={el} val={el} onClick={this._deleteTodo}/> 
        
           )}</div>
        )
    }
    
   
}

class MyComponent extends React.Component {
        _deleteTodo = () => {
                     console.log('here');   this.props.onClick(this.props.val);
        }
        render() {
           return <div onClick={this._deleteTodo}> {this.props.val} </div>
        }
    }
    
ReactDOM.render(<Parent/>, document.getElementById('app'));
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.1.0/react.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.1.0/react-dom.min.js"></script>
<div id="app"></div>

EDIT:

Second: The other approach to it would be to use memoize and return a function

constructor() {
    super();
    this._deleteTodoListener = _.memoize(
                   this._deleteTodo, (element) => {
                        return element.hashCode();
                    }
              )
}

_deleteTodo = (element) => {
   //delete handling here
}

and using it like

todos.map(el => <div key={el} onClick={this._deleteTodoListener(el)}> {el} </div>)

P.S. However this is not a best solution and will still result in multiple functions being created but is still an improvement over the initial case.

Third: However a more appropriate solution to this will be to add an attribute to the topmost div and get the value from event like

_deleteTodo = (e) => {
     console.log(e.currentTarget.getAttribute('data-value'));

 }

 todos.map(el => <div key={el} data-value={el} onClick={this._deleteTodo}> {el} </div>)

However, in this case the attributes are converted to string using toString method and hence and object will be converted to [Object Object] and and array like ["1" , "2", "3"] as "1, 2, 3"


Documentation encourages to use data-attributes and access them from within evt.target.dataset:

_deleteTodo = (evt) => {
  const elementToDelete = evt.target.dataset.el;
  this.setState(prevState => ({
    todos: prevState.todos.filter(el => el !== elementToDelete)
  }))
}

// and from render:

todos.map(
  el => <div key={el} data-el={el} onClick={this._deleteTodo}> {el} </div>
)

Also note that this makes sense only when you have performance issues:

Is it OK to use arrow functions in render methods?

Generally speaking, yes, it is OK, and it is often the easiest way to pass parameters to callback functions.

If you do have performance issues, by all means, optimize!