I suggest to look at Dan Abramov (one of the React core maintainers) answer here:
I think you're making it more complicated than it needs to be.
function Example() {
const [data, dataSet] = useState<any>(null)
useEffect(() => {
async function fetchMyAPI() {
let response = await fetch('api/data')
response = await response.json()
dataSet(response)
}
fetchMyAPI()
}, [])
return <div>{JSON.stringify(data)}</div>
}
Longer term we'll discourage this pattern because it encourages race conditions. Such as — anything could happen between your call starts and ends, and you could have gotten new props. Instead, we'll recommend Suspense for data fetching which will look more like
const response = MyAPIResource.read();
and no effects. But in the meantime you can move the async stuff to a separate function and call it.
You can read more about experimental suspense here.
If you want to use functions outside with eslint.
function OutsideUsageExample({ userId }) {
const [data, dataSet] = useState<any>(null)
const fetchMyAPI = useCallback(async () => {
let response = await fetch('api/data/' + userId)
response = await response.json()
dataSet(response)
}, [userId]) // if userId changes, useEffect will run again
// if you want to run only once, just leave array empty []
useEffect(() => {
fetchMyAPI()
}, [fetchMyAPI])
return (
<div>
<div>data: {JSON.stringify(data)}</div>
<div>
<button onClick={fetchMyAPI}>manual fetch</button>
</div>
</div>
)
}
If you will use useCallback, look at example of how it works useCallback. Sandbox.
import React, { useState, useEffect, useCallback } from "react";
export default function App() {
const [counter, setCounter] = useState(1);
// if counter is changed, than fn will be updated with new counter value
const fn = useCallback(() => {
setCounter(counter + 1);
}, [counter]);
// if counter is changed, than fn will not be updated and counter will be always 1 inside fn
/*const fnBad = useCallback(() => {
setCounter(counter + 1);
}, []);*/
// if fn or counter is changed, than useEffect will rerun
useEffect(() => {
if (!(counter % 2)) return; // this will stop the loop if counter is not even
fn();
}, [fn, counter]);
// this will be infinite loop because fn is always changing with new counter value
/*useEffect(() => {
fn();
}, [fn]);*/
return (
<div>
<div>Counter is {counter}</div>
<button onClick={fn}>add +1 count</button>
</div>
);
}