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react hooks useEffect() cleanup for only componentWillUnmount?

Let me explain the result of this code for asking my issue easily.

const ForExample = () => {
    const [name, setName] = useState('');
    const [username, setUsername] = useState('');

    useEffect(() => {
        console.log('effect');
        console.log({
            name,
            username
        });

        return () => {
            console.log('cleaned up');
            console.log({
                name,
                username
            });
        };
    }, [username]);

    const handleName = e => {
        const { value } = e.target;

        setName(value);
    };

    const handleUsername = e => {
        const { value } = e.target;

        setUsername(value);
    };

    return (
        <div>
            <div>
                <input value={name} onChange={handleName} />
                <input value={username} onChange={handleUsername} />
            </div>
            <div>
                <div>
                    <span>{name}</span>
                </div>
                <div>
                    <span>{username}</span>
                </div>
            </div>
        </div>
    );
};

When the ForExample component mounts, 'effect' will be logged. This is related to the componentDidMount() .

And whenever I change name input, both 'effect' and 'cleaned up' will be logged. Vice versa, no message will be logged whenever I change username input since I added [username] to the second parameter of useEffect() . This is related to the componentDidUpdate()

Lastly, when the ForExample component unmounts, 'cleaned up' will be logged. This is related to the componentWillUnmount() .

We all know that.

To sum, 'cleaned up' is invoked whenever the component is being re-rendered(includes unmount)

If I want to make this component to log 'cleaned up' for only the moment when it is unmount, I just have to change the second parameter of useEffect() to [] .

But If I change [username] to [] , ForExample component no longer implements the componentDidUpdate() for name input.

What I want to do is that, to make the component supports both componentDidUpdate() only for name input and componentWillUnmount() . (logging 'cleaned up' for only the moment when the component is being unmounted)

you can use more than one useEffect

for example if my variable is data1 i can use all of this in my component

useEffect( () => console.log("mount"), [] );
useEffect( () => console.log("will update data1"), [ data1 ] );
useEffect( () => console.log("will update any") );
useEffect( () => () => console.log("will update data1 or unmount"), [ data1 ] );
useEffect( () => () => console.log("unmount"), [] );

Since the cleanup is not dependent on the username , you could put the cleanup in a separate useEffect that is given an empty array as second argument.

Example

 const { useState, useEffect } = React; const ForExample = () => { const [name, setName] = useState(""); const [username, setUsername] = useState(""); useEffect( () => { console.log("effect"); }, [username] ); useEffect(() => { return () => { console.log("cleaned up"); }; }, []); const handleName = e => { const { value } = e.target; setName(value); }; const handleUsername = e => { const { value } = e.target; setUsername(value); }; return ( <div> <div> <input value={name} onChange={handleName} /> <input value={username} onChange={handleUsername} /> </div> <div> <div> <span>{name}</span> </div> <div> <span>{username}</span> </div> </div> </div> ); }; function App() { const [shouldRender, setShouldRender] = useState(true); useEffect(() => { setTimeout(() => { setShouldRender(false); }, 5000); }, []); return shouldRender ? <ForExample /> : null; } ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById("root"));
 <script src="https://unpkg.com/react@16/umd/react.development.js"></script> <script src="https://unpkg.com/react-dom@16/umd/react-dom.development.js"></script> <div id="root"></div>

To add to the accepted answer, I had a similar issue and solved it using a similar approach with the contrived example below. In this case I needed to log some parameters on componentWillUnmount and as described in the original question I didn't want it to log every time the params changed.

const componentWillUnmount = useRef(false)

// This is componentWillUnmount
useEffect(() => {
    return () => {
        componentWillUnmount.current = true
    }
}, [])

useEffect(() => {
    return () => {
        // This line only evaluates to true after the componentWillUnmount happens 
        if (componentWillUnmount.current) {
            console.log(params)
        }
    }

}, [params]) // This dependency guarantees that when the componentWillUnmount fires it will log the latest params
function LegoComponent() {

  const [lego, setLegos] = React.useState([])

  React.useEffect(() => {
    let isSubscribed = true
    fetchLegos().then( legos=> {
      if (isSubscribed) {
        setLegos(legos)
      }
    })
    return () => isSubscribed = false
  }, []);

  return (
    <ul>
    {legos.map(lego=> <li>{lego}</li>)}
    </ul>
  )
}

In the code above, the fetchLegos function returns a promise. We can “cancel” the promise by having a conditional in the scope of useEffect, preventing the app from setting state after the component has unmounted.

Warning: Can't perform a React state update on an unmounted component. This is a no-op, but it indicates a memory leak in your application. To fix, cancel all subscriptions and asynchronous tasks in a useEffect cleanup function.

instead of creating too many complicated functions and methods what I do is I create an event listener and automatically have mount and unmount done for me without having to worry about doing it manually. Here is an example.

//componentDidMount
useEffect( () => {

    window.addEventListener("load",  pageLoad);

    //component will unmount
    return () => {
       
        window.removeEventListener("load", pageLoad);
    }

 });

now that this part is done I just run anything I want from the pageLoad function like this.

const pageLoad = () =>{
console.log(I was mounted and unmounted automatically :D)}

Using custom js events you can emulate unmounting a componentWillUnmount even when having dependency.

Problem:

    useEffect(() => {
    //Dependent Code
    return () => {
        // Desired to perform action on unmount only 'componentWillUnmount' 
        // But it does not
        if(somethingChanged){
            // Perform an Action only if something changed
        }
    }
},[somethingChanged]);

Solution:

// Rewrite this code  to arrange emulate this behaviour

// Decoupling using events
useEffect( () => {
    return () => {
        // Executed only when component unmounts,
        let e = new Event("componentUnmount");
        document.dispatchEvent(e);
    }
}, []);

useEffect( () => {
    function doOnUnmount(){
        if(somethingChanged){
            // Perform an Action only if something changed
        }
    }

    document.addEventListener("componentUnmount",doOnUnmount);
    return () => {
        // This is done whenever value of somethingChanged changes
        document.removeEventListener("componentUnmount",doOnUnmount);
    }

}, [somethingChanged])

Caveats: useEffects have to be in order, useEffect with no dependency have to be written before, this is to avoid the event being called after its removed.

Here is my solution, generalized into a custom hook:

import React, { useEffect, useRef } from 'react';

const useUnmountEffect = (effect, dependencies) => {
  if (typeof effect !== 'function') {
    console.error('Effect must be a function');
  }

  const componentWillUnmount = useRef(false)

  useEffect(() => () => {
    componentWillUnmount.current = true
  }, []);

  useEffect(() => () => {
    if (componentWillUnmount.current) {
      effect?.();
    }
  }, dependencies);
}

export default useUnmountEffect;

useEffect are isolated within its own scope and gets rendered accordingly. Image from https://reactjs.org/docs/hooks-custom.html

在此处输入图片说明

what about:

function useOnUnmount(callback: () => void) {
    const onUnmount = useRef<(() => void) | null>(null);
    onUnmount.current = callback;

    useEffect(() => {
        return () => onUnmount.current?.();
    }, []);
}

useOnUnmount(() => {
    console.log("unmount", props);
});

You can simply write it as:

  useEffect(() => {
  return () => {};
  }, []);

Using two useEffect cleanups as seen in other solutions is not guaranteed because React does not guarantee the cleanup order of sibling effects .

You could try something like this, which will fire on component unmount or window close if enabled, whichever comes first. The first parameter is the callback, which you can change during the component's lifetime. The 2nd parameter is whether to enable the window closing event listener, which may only be set initially to avoid a scenario where we might have to rapidly register and unregister the same event listener, which can fail.

Note, if you see this firing once on mount and again on unmount, it is probably because you are in development mode and have React.StrictMode turned on. At least as of React 18, this will mount your component, unmount it, and then mount it again .

import { useEffect, useState } from "react";

export default function useWillUnmount(callback, beforeUnload = false) {
  const [cache] = useState({beforeUnload});
  cache.call = callback;

  useEffect(() => {
    let cancel = false;

    function unmount() {
      if (cancel) return;
      cancel = true;
      cache.call?.();
    }

    if (cache.beforeUnload) window.addEventListener("beforeunload", unmount);

    return () => {
      if (cache.beforeUnload)
        window.removeEventListener("beforeunload", unmount);
      unmount();
    }
  }, [cache]); // this makes the effect run only once per component lifetime
}

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