Just a small upgrade to keep us current and remove unused suppressions
(probably fixed by some upgrade since).
- `*` is no longer allowed and has been an alias for `any` for a while
now.
This hook reads the status of its ancestor form component, if it exists.
```js
const {pending, data, action, method} = useFormStatus();
```
It can be used to implement a loading indicator, for example. You can
think of it as a shortcut for implementing a loading state with the
useTransition hook.
For now, it's only available in the experimental channel. We'll share
docs once its closer to being stable. There are additional APIs that
will ship alongside it.
Internally it's implemented using startTransition + a context object.
That's a good way to think about its behavior, but the actual
implementation details may change in the future.
Because form elements cannot be nested, the implementation in the
reconciler does not bother to keep track of multiple nested "transition
providers". So although it's implemented using generic Fiber config
methods, it does currently make some assumptions based on React DOM's
requirements.
Stacked on #26570
Previously we restricted Float methods to only being callable while
rendering. This allowed us to make associations between calls and their
position in the DOM tree, for instance hoisting preinitialized styles
into a ShadowRoot or an iframe Document.
When considering how we are going to support Flight support in Float
however it became clear that this restriction would lead to compromises
on the implementation because the Flight client does not execute within
the context of a client render. We want to be able to disaptch Float
directives coming from Flight as soon as possible and this requires
being able to call them outside of render.
this patch modifies Float so that its methods are callable anywhere. The
main consequence of this change is Float will always use the Document
the renderer script is running within as the HoistableRoot. This means
if you preinit as style inside a component render targeting a ShadowRoot
the style will load in the ownerDocument not the ShadowRoot. Practially
speaking it means that preinit is not useful inside ShadowRoots and
iframes.
This tradeoff was deemed acceptable because these methods are
optimistic, not critical. Additionally, the other methods, preconntect,
prefetchDNS, and preload, are not impacted because they already operated
at the level of the ownerDocument and really only interface with the
Network cache layer.
I added a couple additional fixes that were necessary for getting tests
to pass that are worth considering separately.
The first commit improves the diff for `waitForThrow` so it compares
strings if possible.
The second commit makes invokeGuardedCallback not use metaprogramming
pattern and swallows any novel errors produced from trying to run the
guarded callback. Swallowing may not be the best we can do but it at
least protects React against rapid failure when something causes the
dispatchEvent to throw.
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## Summary
Browsers restore state like forms and scroll position right after the
popstate event. To make sure the page work as expected on back or
forward button, we need to flush transitions scheduled in a popstate
synchronously, and only yields if it suspends.
This PR adds a new HostConfig method to check if `window.event ===
'popstate'`, and `scheduleMicrotask` if a transition is scheduled in a
`PopStateEvent`.
## How did you test this change?
yarn test
This removes the concept of `prepareUpdate()`, behind a flag.
React Native already does everything in the commit phase, but generates
a temporary update payload before applying it.
React Fabric does it both in the render phase. Now it just moves it to a
single host config.
For DOM I forked updateProperties into one that does diffing and
updating in one pass vs just applying a pre-diffed updatePayload.
There are a few downsides of this approach:
- If only "children" has changed, we end up scheduling an update to be
done in the commit phase. Since we traverse through it anyway, it's
probably not much extra.
- It does more work in the commit phase so for a large tree that is
mostly unchanged, it'll stall longer.
- It does some extra work for special cases since that work happens if
anything has changed. We no longer have a deep bailout.
- The special cases now have to each replicate the "clean up old props"
loop, leading to extra code.
The benefit is that this doesn't allocate temporary extra objects
(possibly multiple per element if the array has to resize). It's less
work overall. It also gives us an option to reuse this function for a
sync render optimization.
Another benefit is that if we do the loop in the commit phase I can do
further optimizations by reading all props that I need for special cases
in that loop instead of polymorphic reads from props. This is what I'd
like to do in future refactors that would be stacked on top of this
change.
part of https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/26571
merging separately to improve tracking of files renames in git
Rename HostConfig files to FiberConfig to clarify they are configs for
Fiber and not Fizz/Flight. This better conforms to the naming used in
Flight and now Fizz of `ReactFlightServerConfig` and `ReactFizzConfig`