It's worth pointing out that there are times when you want to perform intensive calculations in the render() and take the performance hit. Especially when it involves making calculations from props. Take the case of
class Person extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
name: props.firstName + props.lastName,
};
}
render() {
return <div> {this.state.name} </div>;
}
}
Now when props changes, the state won't be updated as the constructor function only runs when the component is mounted. A better way would be to make the calculation in render. So whenever your component rerenders, it recalculates and renders the right value.
class Person extends React.Component {
render() {
const myName = this.props.firstName + this.props.lastName;
return <div> {myName} </div>;
}
}
And this version is a bit cleaner to read:
class Person extends React.Component {
calculateName = () => {
return this.props.firstName + this.props.lastName;
}
render() {
const myName = this.calculateName();
return <div> {myName} </div>;
}
}