Files
livedash-node/.opencode/skills/vercel-react-best-practices/rules/rerender-lazy-state-init.md
Kaj Kowalski 5bfd762e55 fix: comprehensive TypeScript/build fixes and modernization
- Update tsconfig to ES2024 target and bundler moduleResolution
- Add dynamic imports for chart.js and recharts (bundle optimization)
- Consolidate 17 useState into useReducer in sessions page
- Fix 18 .js extension imports across lib files
- Add type declarations for @rapideditor/country-coder
- Fix platform user types (PlatformUserRole enum)
- Fix Calendar component prop types
- Centralize next-auth type augmentation
- Add force-dynamic to all API routes (prevent build-time prerender)
- Fix Prisma JSON null handling with Prisma.DbNull
- Fix various type mismatches (SessionMessage, ImportRecord, etc.)
- Export ButtonProps from button component
- Update next-themes import path
- Replace JSX.Element with React.ReactElement
- Remove obsolete debug scripts and pnpm lockfile
- Downgrade eslint to v8 for next compatibility
2026-01-20 07:28:10 +01:00

2.0 KiB

title, impact, impactDescription, tags
title impact impactDescription tags
Use Lazy State Initialization MEDIUM wasted computation on every render react, hooks, useState, performance, initialization

Use Lazy State Initialization

Pass a function to useState for expensive initial values. Without the function form, the initializer runs on every render even though the value is only used once.

Incorrect (runs on every render):

function FilteredList({ items }: { items: Item[] }) {
  // buildSearchIndex() runs on EVERY render, even after initialization
  const [searchIndex, setSearchIndex] = useState(buildSearchIndex(items))
  const [query, setQuery] = useState('')
  
  // When query changes, buildSearchIndex runs again unnecessarily
  return <SearchResults index={searchIndex} query={query} />
}

function UserProfile() {
  // JSON.parse runs on every render
  const [settings, setSettings] = useState(
    JSON.parse(localStorage.getItem('settings') || '{}')
  )
  
  return <SettingsForm settings={settings} onChange={setSettings} />
}

Correct (runs only once):

function FilteredList({ items }: { items: Item[] }) {
  // buildSearchIndex() runs ONLY on initial render
  const [searchIndex, setSearchIndex] = useState(() => buildSearchIndex(items))
  const [query, setQuery] = useState('')
  
  return <SearchResults index={searchIndex} query={query} />
}

function UserProfile() {
  // JSON.parse runs only on initial render
  const [settings, setSettings] = useState(() => {
    const stored = localStorage.getItem('settings')
    return stored ? JSON.parse(stored) : {}
  })
  
  return <SettingsForm settings={settings} onChange={setSettings} />
}

Use lazy initialization when computing initial values from localStorage/sessionStorage, building data structures (indexes, maps), reading from the DOM, or performing heavy transformations.

For simple primitives (useState(0)), direct references (useState(props.value)), or cheap literals (useState({})), the function form is unnecessary.