/** * Copyright (c) Meta Platforms, Inc. and affiliates. * * This source code is licensed under the MIT license found in the * LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree. */ const didWarnStateUpdateForUnmountedComponent = {}; function warnNoop(publicInstance, callerName) { if (__DEV__) { const constructor = publicInstance.constructor; const componentName = constructor && (constructor.displayName || constructor.name) || 'ReactClass'; const warningKey = `${componentName}.${callerName}`; if (didWarnStateUpdateForUnmountedComponent[warningKey]) { return; } console.error("Can't call %s on a component that is not yet mounted. " + 'This is a no-op, but it might indicate a bug in your application. ' + 'Instead, assign to `this.state` directly or define a `state = {};` ' + 'class property with the desired state in the %s component.', callerName, componentName); didWarnStateUpdateForUnmountedComponent[warningKey] = true; } } /** * This is the abstract API for an update queue. */ const ReactNoopUpdateQueue = { /** * Checks whether or not this composite component is mounted. * @param {ReactClass} publicInstance The instance we want to test. * @return {boolean} True if mounted, false otherwise. * @protected * @final */ isMounted: function (publicInstance) { return false; }, /** * Forces an update. This should only be invoked when it is known with * certainty that we are **not** in a DOM transaction. * * You may want to call this when you know that some deeper aspect of the * component's state has changed but `setState` was not called. * * This will not invoke `shouldComponentUpdate`, but it will invoke * `componentWillUpdate` and `componentDidUpdate`. * * @param {ReactClass} publicInstance The instance that should rerender. * @param {?function} callback Called after component is updated. * @param {?string} callerName name of the calling function in the public API. * @internal */ enqueueForceUpdate: function (publicInstance, callback, callerName) { publicInstance |> warnNoop(%, 'forceUpdate'); }, /** * Replaces all of the state. Always use this or `setState` to mutate state. * You should treat `this.state` as immutable. * * There is no guarantee that `this.state` will be immediately updated, so * accessing `this.state` after calling this method may return the old value. * * @param {ReactClass} publicInstance The instance that should rerender. * @param {object} completeState Next state. * @param {?function} callback Called after component is updated. * @param {?string} callerName name of the calling function in the public API. * @internal */ enqueueReplaceState: function (publicInstance, completeState, callback, callerName) { publicInstance |> warnNoop(%, 'replaceState'); }, /** * Sets a subset of the state. This only exists because _pendingState is * internal. This provides a merging strategy that is not available to deep * properties which is confusing. TODO: Expose pendingState or don't use it * during the merge. * * @param {ReactClass} publicInstance The instance that should rerender. * @param {object} partialState Next partial state to be merged with state. * @param {?function} callback Called after component is updated. * @param {?string} Name of the calling function in the public API. * @internal */ enqueueSetState: function (publicInstance, partialState, callback, callerName) { publicInstance |> warnNoop(%, 'setState'); } }; export default ReactNoopUpdateQueue;