startTransition
startTransition
lets you update the state without blocking the UI.
startTransition(scope)
Usage
Marking a state update as a non-blocking transition
You can mark a state update as a transition by wrapping it in a startTransition
call:
import { startTransition } from 'react';
function TabContainer() {
const [tab, setTab] = useState('about');
function selectTab(nextTab) {
startTransition(() => {
setTab(nextTab);
});
}
// ...
}
Transitions let you keep the user interface updates responsive even on slow devices.
With a transition, your UI stays responsive in the middle of a re-render. For example, if the user clicks a tab but then change their mind and click another tab, they can do that without waiting for the first re-render to finish.
Reference
startTransition(scope)
The startTransition
function lets you mark a state update as a transition.
import { startTransition } from 'react';
function TabContainer() {
const [tab, setTab] = useState('about');
function selectTab(nextTab) {
startTransition(() => {
setTab(nextTab);
});
}
// ...
}
Parameters
scope
: A function that updates some state by calling one or moreset
functions. React immediately callsscope
with no parameters and marks all state updates scheduled synchronously during thescope
function call as transitions. They will be non-blocking and will not display unwanted loading indicators.
Returns
startTransition
does not return anything.
Caveats
-
startTransition
does not provide a way to track whether a transition is pending. To show a pending indicator while the transition is ongoing, you needuseTransition
instead. -
You can wrap an update into a transition only if you have access to the
set
function of that state. If you want to start a transition in response to some prop or a custom Hook return value, tryuseDeferredValue
instead. -
The function you pass to
startTransition
must be synchronous. React immediately executes this function, marking all state updates that happen while it executes as transitions. If you try to perform more state updates later (for example, in a timeout), they won’t be marked as transitions. -
A state update marked as a transition will be interrupted by other state updates. For example, if you update a chart component inside a transition, but then start typing into an input while the chart is in the middle of a re-render, React will restart the rendering work on the chart component after handling the input state update.
-
Transition updates can’t be used to control text inputs.
-
If there are multiple ongoing transitions, React currently batches them together. This is a limitation that will likely be removed in a future release.