So eventually we re-render. We call useState during render. And only then, during render, React will perform the updates inside the queue of this hook. So it takes the first action, gives it the previous value, gets back the new value, which is 1. And if there are more actions, it continues to the next action and performs them one by one. And then goes to the next statement in our render function. So this is called a lazy update. Which means, React only does the work when the result of the work is needed. And everything I say about useState holds for useReducer because in fact, under the hood, useState uses useReducer. So it's the same mechanism behind the scenes.
Now you might be wondering what about render bailout? So if React only calculates the new state during render, how can it bail out of render if the new state is different than the old state? So in this case, we have a state that starts from zero. And if we update it to zero, you would expect React not to rerender our component. So it turns out there's actually another step that sometimes React decides to take for this optimization, which is to eagerly calculate the new state immediately when we call the setState function. And then if the new state is the same as the old state, it doesn't schedule a rerender. And if they are different, then it continues normally, but it caches the result of the calculation inside the update queue so we can use it later when we render the component. So the cycle continues, we get to the new state function, React performs the updates inside the queue, and if the action already has a cached result, it uses it and updates the state of the hook. So we have these two modes, lazy or eager. With lazy, React only performs the actions when they are needed, and with eager, they are performed immediately. And lazy is used to save redundant calculations and postpone them, and eager is used to bail out and save redundant re-renders.
And the final part is when does React decide to re-render? So when you have event handlers, for example, on click, React runs them inside something they call a batch. And inside the batch, all of the updates are queued. So in this case, we have two calls to set counter, both of them are queued. And when the function completes, the batch is over and React re-renders. So in this case, we have two updates in the queue and one re-render. And what about async event handlers? With this example, the function completes before the async operation is done. So in this case, when we get to set counter, we're already outside of the batch which means that it will trigger a re-render immediately after calling set counter. So in this case, we will have two calls to set counter and two re-renders of the component. And now, there are ways to manually invoke the batch, but we won't talk about them during this talk. So, in fact, we are done. I hope you enjoyed. I hope you learned something new and remember that you can always open the source code of React Hooks. If you find it hard, you can contact me and I'll help you. And if you have any other questions, I'll be happy to answer them in the Discord channel. And I hope you have a good conference and stay safe and I hope to see you all face to face soon. Bye bye.
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