forked from facebook/react
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
Commit
This commit does not belong to any branch on this repository, and may belong to a fork outside of the repository.
Diff properties in the commit phase instead of generating an update p…
…ayload (facebook#26583) This removes the concept of `prepareUpdate()`, behind a flag. React Native already does everything in the commit phase, but generates a temporary update payload before applying it. React Fabric does it both in the render phase. Now it just moves it to a single host config. For DOM I forked updateProperties into one that does diffing and updating in one pass vs just applying a pre-diffed updatePayload. There are a few downsides of this approach: - If only "children" has changed, we end up scheduling an update to be done in the commit phase. Since we traverse through it anyway, it's probably not much extra. - It does more work in the commit phase so for a large tree that is mostly unchanged, it'll stall longer. - It does some extra work for special cases since that work happens if anything has changed. We no longer have a deep bailout. - The special cases now have to each replicate the "clean up old props" loop, leading to extra code. The benefit is that this doesn't allocate temporary extra objects (possibly multiple per element if the array has to resize). It's less work overall. It also gives us an option to reuse this function for a sync render optimization. Another benefit is that if we do the loop in the commit phase I can do further optimizations by reading all props that I need for special cases in that loop instead of polymorphic reads from props. This is what I'd like to do in future refactors that would be stacked on top of this change.
- Loading branch information
1 parent
5a4bb1d
commit 90cf94f
Showing
19 changed files
with
675 additions
and
130 deletions.
There are no files selected for viewing
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
Oops, something went wrong.