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React 18/19 patterns for hooks discipline, server/client component boundaries, Suspense, form actions, data fetching, state management, and accessibility-first composition. Use when writing or reviewing React components.
npx claudepluginhub affaan-m/ecc --plugin eccHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/ecc:react-patternsThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Idiomatic React 18/19 patterns for building robust, accessible, performant component trees.
Guides React development with decision trees for hook selection, component patterns, state management, Server Components, and performance optimization.
Guides implementation of modern React patterns: hooks, component composition, state management, performance optimizations, concurrent features. Use for building or refactoring components.
Provides React 19 patterns for components, hooks, Server Components, data fetching, Suspense boundaries, and render optimization with memoization. Use when writing or refactoring React apps.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Idiomatic React 18/19 patterns for building robust, accessible, performant component trees.
forwardRef/useEffect-heavy code// Good: derive during render
function Cart({ items }: { items: CartItem[] }) {
const total = items.reduce((sum, i) => sum + i.price * i.qty, 0);
return <span>{formatMoney(total)}</span>;
}
// Bad: derived state stored separately
function Cart({ items }: { items: CartItem[] }) {
const [total, setTotal] = useState(0);
useEffect(() => {
setTotal(items.reduce((sum, i) => sum + i.price * i.qty, 0));
}, [items]);
return <span>{formatMoney(total)}</span>;
}
Derived state in useEffect adds a render cycle, can desync, and obscures the data flow.
Effects, mutations, network calls, and subscriptions live in event handlers or useEffect — never in the render body.
React has no inheritance model for components. Compose with children, render props, or component props.
See rules/react/hooks.md for the full ruleset. Highlights:
setX(prev => prev + 1)) when new state depends on olduseMemo/useCallback only when a profiler or a dependency chain proves it mattersUsed by one component?
-> useState inside it
Used by parent + a few descendants?
-> lift to nearest common ancestor
Used across distant branches AND low-frequency reads (theme, auth, locale)?
-> React Context
High-frequency updates shared across the tree?
-> external store (Zustand, Jotai, Redux Toolkit)
Derived from a server?
-> server-state library (TanStack Query, SWR, RSC fetch)
Most pages do not need context or a global store. Resist abstraction until duplicated lifting becomes painful.
// Server Component - default, async, never ships JS for itself
export default async function ProductPage({ params }: { params: { id: string } }) {
const product = await db.product.findUnique({ where: { id: params.id } });
if (!product) notFound();
return <ProductView product={product} />;
}
// Client Component - opt in with "use client"
"use client";
export function AddToCartButton({ productId }: { productId: string }) {
const [pending, startTransition] = useTransition();
return (
<button
disabled={pending}
onClick={() => startTransition(() => addToCart(productId))}
>
{pending ? "Adding..." : "Add to cart"}
</button>
);
}
Boundaries:
children<form action={...}> or imperatively from event handlersimport a Server Component from a Client Component file — compose them via children instead<ErrorBoundary fallback={<ErrorView />}>
<Suspense fallback={<UserSkeleton />}>
<UserDetail id={id} />
</Suspense>
</ErrorBoundary>
react-error-boundary for a hook-friendly wrapper"use client";
import { useActionState } from "react";
const initial = { error: null as string | null };
async function updateUserAction(_prev: typeof initial, formData: FormData) {
"use server";
const parsed = UserSchema.safeParse(Object.fromEntries(formData));
if (!parsed.success) return { error: "Invalid input" };
await db.user.update({ where: { id: parsed.data.id }, data: parsed.data });
return { error: null };
}
export function UserForm() {
const [state, formAction, pending] = useActionState(updateUserAction, initial);
return (
<form action={formAction}>
<input name="name" required />
<button type="submit" disabled={pending}>Save</button>
{state.error && <p role="alert">{state.error}</p>}
</form>
);
}
Use controlled when the value drives other UI, formats on every keystroke, or implements real-time validation.
For multi-step forms, dynamic field arrays, or cross-field validation: use a library (React Hook Form, TanStack Form). Roll-your-own state management for forms past trivial complexity is a maintenance trap.
| Need | Tool |
|---|---|
| Per-request data in Next.js App Router | RSC await fetch() |
| Client-side cache + mutations + invalidation | TanStack Query |
| Lightweight client cache + revalidation | SWR |
| Real-time subscriptions | Server-Sent Events, WebSockets, or the lib's subscription API |
| One-off fire-and-forget | fetch() in an event handler |
Avoid useEffect + fetch for application data — race conditions, no cache, no retry, no Suspense integration.
children<Layout>
<Header />
<Main>{content}</Main>
</Layout>
<Page header={<Nav />} sidebar={<Filters />}>
<Results />
</Page>
<Tabs defaultValue="profile">
<Tabs.List>
<Tabs.Trigger value="profile">Profile</Tabs.Trigger>
<Tabs.Trigger value="settings">Settings</Tabs.Trigger>
</Tabs.List>
<Tabs.Panel value="profile"><Profile /></Tabs.Panel>
<Tabs.Panel value="settings"><Settings /></Tabs.Panel>
</Tabs>
Useful when the parent needs to pass parameters to the rendered output:
<DataLoader id={id}>
{({ data, isLoading }) => isLoading ? <Spinner /> : <UserCard user={data} />}
</DataLoader>
Modern alternative: a hook (useData(id)) returning the same shape — usually cleaner.
React.memo Actually HelpsWrap a component in React.memo only when:
React.memo adds an equality check on every render. If props differ on most renders, the check is pure overhead.
themeContext does not re-render auth consumersuseSyncExternalStore for external state libraries — required for safe concurrent renderingkey props (database id, not array index)@tanstack/react-virtual or react-window once visible item count exceeds ~50 with non-trivial rows<button>, <a>, <nav>, <main>) before reaching for role attributes<label htmlFor> or aria-label if visually labeled by an iconaxe in component tests (see skills/react-testing)This skill is router-agnostic. The patterns above work with React Router, TanStack Router, Next.js App Router, Remix Router. Router-specific patterns (loaders, actions, nested layouts) follow the router's documentation — those are framework concerns layered on top of React core.
react-native-patterns skill (not present yet)react-reviewer for code review, react-build-resolver for build/bundler errors/react-review, /react-build, /react-testfunction useDebounce<T>(value: T, delay = 300): T {
const [debounced, setDebounced] = useState(value);
useEffect(() => {
const id = setTimeout(() => setDebounced(value), delay);
return () => clearTimeout(id);
}, [value, delay]);
return debounced;
}
function SearchBox() {
const [query, setQuery] = useState("");
const debounced = useDebounce(query, 300);
const { data } = useQuery({
queryKey: ["search", debounced],
queryFn: () => searchApi(debounced),
enabled: debounced.length > 0,
});
return (
<>
<input value={query} onChange={(e) => setQuery(e.target.value)} />
<Results items={data ?? []} />
</>
);
}
useOptimistic"use client";
import { useOptimistic } from "react";
export function MessageList({ messages }: { messages: Message[] }) {
const [optimistic, addOptimistic] = useOptimistic(
messages,
(state, newMessage: Message) => [...state, newMessage],
);
async function send(formData: FormData) {
const text = String(formData.get("text"));
addOptimistic({ id: "pending", text, sender: "me" });
await saveMessage(text);
}
return (
<>
<ul>{optimistic.map((m) => <li key={m.id}>{m.text}</li>)}</ul>
<form action={send}>
<input name="text" />
<button type="submit">Send</button>
</form>
</>
);
}
// Two contexts: one rarely changes, one frequently
const ThemeContext = createContext<Theme>("light");
const NotificationsContext = createContext<Notification[]>([]);
// A component that only consumes ThemeContext does NOT re-render when notifications change