It's important to understand which lifecycle hooks are going to be called on your route components to implement lots of different functionality in your app. The most common thing is fetching data.
There is no difference in the lifecycle of a component in the router as just React itself. Let's peel away the idea of routes, and just think about the components being rendered at different URLs.
Consider this route config:
<Route path="/" component={App}>
<IndexRoute component={Home}/>
<Route path="invoices/:invoiceId" component={Invoice}/>
<Route path="accounts/:accountId" component={Account}/>
</Route>
-
Lets say the user enters the app at
/
.Component Lifecycle Hooks called App (2) componentDidMount
Home (1) componentDidMount
Invoice N/A Account N/A -
Now they navigate from
/
to/invoices/123
Component Lifecycle Hooks called App (1) componentWillReceiveProps
, (4)componentDidUpdate
Home (2) componentWillUnmount
Invoice (3) componentDidMount
Account N/A App
getscomponentWillReceiveProps
andcomponentDidUpdate
because it stayed rendered but just received new props from the router (like:children
,params
,location
, etc.)Home
is no longer rendered, so it gets unmounted.Invoice
is mounted for the first time.
-
Now they navigate from
/invoices/123
to/invoices/789
Component Lifecycle Hooks called App (1) componentWillReceiveProps
, (4)componentDidUpdate
Home N/A Invoice (2) componentWillReceiveProps
, (3)componentDidUpdate
Account N/A All the components that were mounted before, are still mounted, they just receive new props from the router.
-
Now they navigate from
/invoices/789
to/accounts/123
Component Lifecycle Hooks called App (1) componentWillReceiveProps
, (4)componentDidUpdate
Home N/A Invoice (2) componentWillUnmount
Account (3) componentDidMount
While there are other ways to fetch data with the router, the simplest
way is to simply use the lifecycle hooks of your components and keep
that data in state. Now that we understand the lifecycle of components
when changing routes, we can implement simple data fetching inside of
Invoice
.
let Invoice = React.createClass({
getInitialState () {
return {
invoice: null
}
},
componentDidMount () {
// fetch data initially in scenario 2 from above
this.fetchInvoice()
},
componentDidUpdate (prevProps) {
// respond to parameter change in scenario 3
let oldId = prevProps.params.invoiceId
let newId = this.props.params.invoiceId
if (newId !== oldId)
this.fetchInvoice()
},
componentWillUnmount () {
// allows us to ignore an inflight request in scenario 4
this.ignoreLastFetch = true
},
fetchInvoice () {
let url = `/api/invoices/${this.props.params.invoiceId}`
this.request = fetch(url, (err, data) => {
if (!this.ignoreLastFetch)
this.setState({ invoice: data.invoice })
})
},
render () {
return <InvoiceView invoice={this.state.invoice}/>
}
})