Tracing
If you notice your components feeling too slow or seeming to render too often, two helpful functions can show you exactly what observables they’re listening to and why they’re rendering.
useTraceListeners()
Call useTraceListeners()
anywhere within observer
or any React component to console.log a list of every observable being track for changes. This can help you find and reduce the number of listeners.
import { useTraceListeners } from "@legendapp/state/trace";
const Component = observer(function Component(props) {
// Call useTraceListeners anywhere inside the component
useTraceListeners();
return <div>{state.count.get()}</div>;
/* This logs:
[legend-state] tracking 1 observable:
1: count
*/
});
useTraceUpdates()
Call useTraceUpdates()
anywhere within observer
or any React component to console.log information about the observable change that causes each render. This can help you track down why components are rendering too often.
import { useTraceUpdates } from "@legendapp/state/trace";
const Component = observer(function Component(props) {
// Call useTraceUpdates anywhere inside the component
useTraceUpdates();
return <div>{state.count.get()}</div>;
/* This logs:
[legend-state] Rendering because "count" changed:
from: 0
to: 1
*/
});
useVerifyNotTracking()
Call useVerifyNotTracking()
anywhere within any React component to console.error if it is tracking anything. This is useful if you are going for fine-grained reactivity and want to make sure parent components are not tracking any observables.
import { useVerifyNotTracking } from "@legendapp/state/trace";
const Component = observer(function Component(props) {
// Call useVerifyNotTracking anywhere inside the component
useVerifyNotTracking();
// This will log an error because get() makes it track
return <div>{state.count.get()}</div>;
});
const FineComponent = observer(function FineComponent(props) {
// Call useVerifyNotTracking anywhere inside the component
useVerifyNotTracking();
// This will not log because rendering the observable directly
// does not re-render this component
return <div>{state.count}</div>;
});
useVerifyOneRender()
Call useVerifyOneRender()
anywhere within any React component to console.error if it renders more than once. This is useful if you and want to make sure components are not rendered more than once.
import { useVerifyOneRender } from "@legendapp/state/trace";
const Component = observer(function Component(props) {
// Call useVerifyOneRender anywhere inside the component
useVerifyOneRender();
// This will log an error after one render when count is updated
return <div>{state.count.get()}</div>;
});
const Component = observer(function Component(props) {
// Call useVerifyOneRender anywhere inside the component
useVerifyOneRender();
// This will not log because `get(false)` does not track observable
// does not re-render this component
return <div>{state.count.get(false)}</div>;
});
Note: All these hooks take name as an argument which can be used to identify which component is logging it
What to do with this information
- You may want to call
get()
at a higher level in an object to only listen to it, and not every single child. - Use a shallow listener with
get(true)
to only update when keys are added to or removed from the object. - You may want to call
peek()
to not listen at all.
If you find an observable changing often and you’re not sure why, you can put a breakpoint on the console log to catch it. Or add your own listener to the observable to watch every change:
// Why is count rendering so often?
state.count.onChange(({ value }) => {
console.log("Count changed", value);
console.trace();
debugger;
});