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React v15.4.0

November 16, 2016 szerzők Dan Abramov

This blog site has been archived. Go to react.dev/blog to see the recent posts.

Today we are releasing React 15.4.0.

We didn’t announce the previous minor releases on the blog because most of the changes were bug fixes. However, 15.4.0 is a special release, and we would like to highlight a few notable changes in it.

Separating React and React DOM

More than a year ago, we started separating React and React DOM into separate packages. We deprecated React.render() in favor of ReactDOM.render() in React 0.14, and removed DOM-specific APIs from React completely in React 15. However, the React DOM implementation still secretly lived inside the React package.

In React 15.4.0, we are finally moving React DOM implementation to the React DOM package. The React package will now contain only the renderer-agnostic code such as React.Component and React.createElement().

This solves a few long-standing issues, such as errors when you import React DOM in the same file as the snapshot testing renderer.

If you only use the official and documented React APIs you won’t need to change anything in your application.

However, there is a possibility that you imported private APIs from react/lib/*, or that a package you rely on might use them. We would like to remind you that this was never supported, and that your apps should not rely on internal APIs. The React internals will keep changing as we work to make React better.

Another thing to watch out for is that React DOM Server is now about the same size as React DOM since it contains its own copy of the React reconciler. We don’t recommend using React DOM Server on the client in most cases.

Profiling Components with Chrome Timeline

You can now visualize React components in the Chrome Timeline. This lets you see which components exactly get mounted, updated, and unmounted, how much time they take relative to each other.

React components in Chrome timeline

To use it:

  1. Load your app with ?react_perf in the query string (for example, http://localhost:3000/?react_perf).
  2. Open the Chrome DevTools Timeline tab and press Record.
  3. Perform the actions you want to profile. Don’t record more than 20 seconds or Chrome might hang.
  4. Stop recording.
  5. React events will be grouped under the User Timing label.

Note that the numbers are relative so components will render faster in production. Still, this should help you realize when unrelated UI gets updated by mistake, and how deep and how often your UI updates occur.

Currently Chrome, Edge, and IE are the only browsers supporting this feature, but we use the standard User Timing API so we expect more browsers to add support for it.

Mocking Refs for Snapshot Testing

If you’re using Jest snapshot testing, you might have had issues with components that rely on refs. With React 15.4.0, we introduce a way to provide mock refs to the test renderer. For example, consider this component using a ref in componentDidMount:

import React from 'react';

export default class MyInput extends React.Component {
  componentDidMount() {
    this.input.focus();  }

  render() {
    return (
      <input
        ref={node => this.input = node}      />
    );
  }
}

With snapshot renderer, this.input will be null because there is no DOM. React 15.4.0 lets us avoid such crashes by passing a custom createNodeMock function to the snapshot renderer in an options argument:

import React from 'react';
import MyInput from './MyInput';
import renderer from 'react-test-renderer';

function createNodeMock(element) {  if (element.type === 'input') {    return {      focus() {},    };  }  return null;}
it('renders correctly', () => {
  const options = {createNodeMock};
  const tree = renderer.create(<MyInput />, options);  expect(tree).toMatchSnapshot();
});

We would like to thank Brandon Dail for implementing this feature.

You can learn more about snapshot testing in this Jest blog post.


This blog site has been archived. Go to react.dev/blog to see the recent posts.

Installation

We recommend using Yarn or npm for managing front-end dependencies. If you’re new to package managers, the Yarn documentation is a good place to get started.

To install React with Yarn, run:

yarn add react@15.4.0 react-dom@15.4.0

To install React with npm, run:

npm install --save react@15.4.0 react-dom@15.4.0

We recommend using a bundler like webpack or Browserify so you can write modular code and bundle it together into small packages to optimize load time.

Remember that by default, React runs extra checks and provides helpful warnings in development mode. When deploying your app, make sure to compile it in production mode.

In case you don’t use a bundler, we also provide pre-built bundles in the npm packages which you can include as script tags on your page:

We’ve also published version 15.4.0 of the react, react-dom, and addons packages on npm and the react package on bower.


Changelog

React

  • React package and browser build no longer “secretly” includes React DOM.
    (@sebmarkbage in #7164 and #7168)
  • Required PropTypes now fail with specific messages for null and undefined.
    (@chenglou in #7291)
  • Improved development performance by freezing children instead of copying.
    (@keyanzhang in #7455)

React DOM

  • Fixed occasional test failures when React DOM is used together with shallow renderer.
    (@goatslacker in #8097)
  • Added a warning for invalid aria- attributes.
    (@jessebeach in #7744)
  • Added a warning for using autofocus rather than autoFocus.
    (@hkal in #7694)
  • Removed an unnecessary warning about polyfilling String.prototype.split.
    (@nhunzaker in #7629)
  • Clarified the warning about not calling PropTypes manually.
    (@jedwards1211 in #7777)
  • The unstable batchedUpdates API now passes the wrapped function’s return value through.
    (@bgnorlov in #7444)
  • Fixed a bug with updating text in IE 8.
    (@mnpenner in #7832)

React Perf

  • When ReactPerf is started, you can now view the relative time spent in components as a chart in Chrome Timeline.
    (@gaearon in #7549)

React Test Utils

  • If you call Simulate.click() on a <input disabled onClick={foo} /> then foo will get called whereas it didn’t before.
    (@nhunzaker in #7642)

React Test Renderer

  • Due to packaging changes, it no longer crashes when imported together with React DOM in the same file.
    (@sebmarkbage in #7164 and #7168)
  • ReactTestRenderer.create() now accepts {createNodeMock: element => mock} as an optional argument so you can mock refs with snapshot testing.
    (@Aweary in #7649 and #8261)
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