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.github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/3-framework.yml

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## Apply to be included as a recommended React framework
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_This form is for framework authors to apply to be included as a recommended [React framework](https://react.dev/learn/start-a-new-react-project). If you are not a framework author, please contact the authors before submitting._
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_This form is for framework authors to apply to be included as a recommended [React framework](https://react.dev/learn/creating-a-react-app). If you are not a framework author, please contact the authors before submitting._
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Our goal when recommending a framework is to start developers with a React project that solves common problems like code splitting, data fetching, routing, and HTML generation without any extra work later. We believe this will allow users to get started quickly with React, and scale their app to production.
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While we understand that many frameworks may want to be featured, this page is not a place to advertise every possible React framework or all frameworks that you can add React to. There are many great frameworks that offer support for React that are not listed in our guides. The frameworks we recommend have invested significantly in the React ecosystem, and collaborated with the React team to be compatible with our [full-stack React architecture vision](https://react.dev/learn/start-a-new-react-project#which-features-make-up-the-react-teams-full-stack-architecture-vision).
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While we understand that many frameworks may want to be featured, this page is not a place to advertise every possible React framework or all frameworks that you can add React to. There are many great frameworks that offer support for React that are not listed in our guides. The frameworks we recommend have invested significantly in the React ecosystem, and collaborated with the React team to be compatible with our [full-stack React architecture vision](https://react.dev/learn/creating-a-react-app#which-features-make-up-the-react-teams-full-stack-architecture-vision).
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To be included, frameworks must meet the following criteria:
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src/components/Layout/HomeContent.js

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<CTA
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color="gray"
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icon="framework"
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href="/learn/start-a-new-react-project">
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href="/learn/creating-a-react-app">
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Get started with a framework
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</CTA>
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</div>

src/content/blog/2023/03/22/react-labs-what-we-have-been-working-on-march-2023.md

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Now that we have data fetching pretty well sorted, we're exploring the other direction: sending data from the client to the server, so that you can execute database mutations and implement forms. We're doing this by letting you pass Server Action functions across the server/client boundary, which the client can then call, providing seamless RPC. Server Actions also give you progressively enhanced forms before JavaScript loads.
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React Server Components has shipped in [Next.js App Router](/learn/start-a-new-react-project#nextjs-app-router). This showcases a deep integration of a router that really buys into RSC as a primitive, but it's not the only way to build a RSC-compatible router and framework. There's a clear separation for features provided by the RSC spec and implementation. React Server Components is meant as a spec for components that work across compatible React frameworks.
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React Server Components has shipped in [Next.js App Router](/learn/creating-a-react-app#nextjs-app-router). This showcases a deep integration of a router that really buys into RSC as a primitive, but it's not the only way to build a RSC-compatible router and framework. There's a clear separation for features provided by the RSC spec and implementation. React Server Components is meant as a spec for components that work across compatible React frameworks.
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We generally recommend using an existing framework, but if you need to build your own custom framework, it is possible. Building your own RSC-compatible framework is not as easy as we'd like it to be, mainly due to the deep bundler integration needed. The current generation of bundlers are great for use on the client, but they weren't designed with first-class support for splitting a single module graph between the server and the client. This is why we're now partnering directly with bundler developers to get the primitives for RSC built-in.
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## Transition Tracing {/*transition-tracing*/}
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The Transition Tracing API lets you detect when [React Transitions](/reference/react/useTransition) become slower and investigate why they may be slow. Following our last update, we have completed the initial design of the API and published an [RFC](https://github.com/reactjs/rfcs/pull/238). The basic capabilities have also been implemented. The project is currently on hold. We welcome feedback on the RFC and look forward to resuming its development to provide a better performance measurement tool for React. This will be particularly useful with routers built on top of React Transitions, like the [Next.js App Router](/learn/start-a-new-react-project#nextjs-app-router).
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The Transition Tracing API lets you detect when [React Transitions](/reference/react/useTransition) become slower and investigate why they may be slow. Following our last update, we have completed the initial design of the API and published an [RFC](https://github.com/reactjs/rfcs/pull/238). The basic capabilities have also been implemented. The project is currently on hold. We welcome feedback on the RFC and look forward to resuming its development to provide a better performance measurement tool for React. This will be particularly useful with routers built on top of React Transitions, like the [Next.js App Router](/learn/creating-a-react-app#nextjs-app-router).
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* * *
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In addition to this update, our team has made recent guest appearances on community podcasts and livestreams to speak more on our work and answer questions.

src/content/blog/2024/12/05/react-19.md

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Server Components are a new option that allows rendering components ahead of time, before bundling, in an environment separate from your client application or SSR server. This separate environment is the "server" in React Server Components. Server Components can run once at build time on your CI server, or they can be run for each request using a web server.
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React 19 includes all of the React Server Components features included from the Canary channel. This means libraries that ship with Server Components can now target React 19 as a peer dependency with a `react-server` [export condition](https://github.com/reactjs/rfcs/blob/main/text/0227-server-module-conventions.md#react-server-conditional-exports) for use in frameworks that support the [Full-stack React Architecture](/learn/start-a-new-react-project#which-features-make-up-the-react-teams-full-stack-architecture-vision).
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React 19 includes all of the React Server Components features included from the Canary channel. This means libraries that ship with Server Components can now target React 19 as a peer dependency with a `react-server` [export condition](https://github.com/reactjs/rfcs/blob/main/text/0227-server-module-conventions.md#react-server-conditional-exports) for use in frameworks that support the [Full-stack React Architecture](/learn/creating-a-react-app#which-features-make-up-the-react-teams-full-stack-architecture-vision).
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<Note>

src/content/learn/add-react-to-an-existing-project.md

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Here's how we recommend to set it up:
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1. **Build the React part of your app** using one of the [React-based frameworks](/learn/start-a-new-react-project).
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1. **Build the React part of your app** using one of the [React-based frameworks](/learn/creating-a-react-app).
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2. **Specify `/some-app` as the *base path*** in your framework's configuration (here's how: [Next.js](https://nextjs.org/docs/app/api-reference/config/next-config-js/basePath), [Gatsby](https://www.gatsbyjs.com/docs/how-to/previews-deploys-hosting/path-prefix/)).
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3. **Configure your server or a proxy** so that all requests under `/some-app/` are handled by your React app.
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Notice how the original HTML content from `index.html` is preserved, but your own `NavigationBar` React component now appears inside the `<nav id="navigation">` from your HTML. Read the [`createRoot` usage documentation](/reference/react-dom/client/createRoot#rendering-a-page-partially-built-with-react) to learn more about rendering React components inside an existing HTML page.
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When you adopt React in an existing project, it's common to start with small interactive components (like buttons), and then gradually keep "moving upwards" until eventually your entire page is built with React. If you ever reach that point, we recommend migrating to [a React framework](/learn/start-a-new-react-project) right after to get the most out of React.
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When you adopt React in an existing project, it's common to start with small interactive components (like buttons), and then gradually keep "moving upwards" until eventually your entire page is built with React. If you ever reach that point, we recommend migrating to [a React framework](/learn/creating-a-react-app) right after to get the most out of React.
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## Using React Native in an existing native mobile app {/*using-react-native-in-an-existing-native-mobile-app*/}
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src/content/learn/synchronizing-with-effects.md

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This list of downsides is not specific to React. It applies to fetching data on mount with any library. Like with routing, data fetching is not trivial to do well, so we recommend the following approaches:
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- **If you use a [framework](/learn/start-a-new-react-project#full-stack-frameworks), use its built-in data fetching mechanism.** Modern React frameworks have integrated data fetching mechanisms that are efficient and don't suffer from the above pitfalls.
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- **If you use a [framework](/learn/creating-a-react-app#full-stack-frameworks), use its built-in data fetching mechanism.** Modern React frameworks have integrated data fetching mechanisms that are efficient and don't suffer from the above pitfalls.
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- **Otherwise, consider using or building a client-side cache.** Popular open source solutions include [TanStack Query](https://tanstack.com/query/latest), [useSWR](https://swr.vercel.app/), and [React Router 6.4+.](https://beta.reactrouter.com/en/main/start/overview) You can build your own solution too, in which case you would use Effects under the hood, but add logic for deduplicating requests, caching responses, and avoiding network waterfalls (by preloading data or hoisting data requirements to routes).
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You can continue fetching data directly in Effects if neither of these approaches suit you.

src/content/learn/typescript.md

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## Installation {/*installation*/}
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All [production-grade React frameworks](/learn/start-a-new-react-project#full-stack-frameworks) offer support for using TypeScript. Follow the framework specific guide for installation:
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All [production-grade React frameworks](/learn/creating-a-react-app#full-stack-frameworks) offer support for using TypeScript. Follow the framework specific guide for installation:
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- [Next.js](https://nextjs.org/docs/app/building-your-application/configuring/typescript)
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- [Remix](https://remix.run/docs/en/1.19.2/guides/typescript)

src/content/learn/you-might-not-need-an-effect.md

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* **You don't need Effects to transform data for rendering.** For example, let's say you want to filter a list before displaying it. You might feel tempted to write an Effect that updates a state variable when the list changes. However, this is inefficient. When you update the state, React will first call your component functions to calculate what should be on the screen. Then React will ["commit"](/learn/render-and-commit) these changes to the DOM, updating the screen. Then React will run your Effects. If your Effect *also* immediately updates the state, this restarts the whole process from scratch! To avoid the unnecessary render passes, transform all the data at the top level of your components. That code will automatically re-run whenever your props or state change.
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* **You don't need Effects to handle user events.** For example, let's say you want to send an `/api/buy` POST request and show a notification when the user buys a product. In the Buy button click event handler, you know exactly what happened. By the time an Effect runs, you don't know *what* the user did (for example, which button was clicked). This is why you'll usually handle user events in the corresponding event handlers.
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You *do* need Effects to [synchronize](/learn/synchronizing-with-effects#what-are-effects-and-how-are-they-different-from-events) with external systems. For example, you can write an Effect that keeps a jQuery widget synchronized with the React state. You can also fetch data with Effects: for example, you can synchronize the search results with the current search query. Keep in mind that modern [frameworks](/learn/start-a-new-react-project#full-stack-frameworks) provide more efficient built-in data fetching mechanisms than writing Effects directly in your components.
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You *do* need Effects to [synchronize](/learn/synchronizing-with-effects#what-are-effects-and-how-are-they-different-from-events) with external systems. For example, you can write an Effect that keeps a jQuery widget synchronized with the React state. You can also fetch data with Effects: for example, you can synchronize the search results with the current search query. Keep in mind that modern [frameworks](/learn/creating-a-react-app#full-stack-frameworks) provide more efficient built-in data fetching mechanisms than writing Effects directly in your components.
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To help you gain the right intuition, let's look at some common concrete examples!
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Handling race conditions is not the only difficulty with implementing data fetching. You might also want to think about caching responses (so that the user can click Back and see the previous screen instantly), how to fetch data on the server (so that the initial server-rendered HTML contains the fetched content instead of a spinner), and how to avoid network waterfalls (so that a child can fetch data without waiting for every parent).
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**These issues apply to any UI library, not just React. Solving them is not trivial, which is why modern [frameworks](/learn/start-a-new-react-project#full-stack-frameworks) provide more efficient built-in data fetching mechanisms than fetching data in Effects.**
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**These issues apply to any UI library, not just React. Solving them is not trivial, which is why modern [frameworks](/learn/creating-a-react-app#full-stack-frameworks) provide more efficient built-in data fetching mechanisms than fetching data in Effects.**
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If you don't use a framework (and don't want to build your own) but would like to make data fetching from Effects more ergonomic, consider extracting your fetching logic into a custom Hook like in this example:
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src/content/learn/your-first-component.md

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Most React apps use components all the way down. This means that you won't only use components for reusable pieces like buttons, but also for larger pieces like sidebars, lists, and ultimately, complete pages! Components are a handy way to organize UI code and markup, even if some of them are only used once.
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[React-based frameworks](/learn/start-a-new-react-project) take this a step further. Instead of using an empty HTML file and letting React "take over" managing the page with JavaScript, they *also* generate the HTML automatically from your React components. This allows your app to show some content before the JavaScript code loads.
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[React-based frameworks](/learn/creating-a-react-app) take this a step further. Instead of using an empty HTML file and letting React "take over" managing the page with JavaScript, they *also* generate the HTML automatically from your React components. This allows your app to show some content before the JavaScript code loads.
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Still, many websites only use React to [add interactivity to existing HTML pages.](/learn/add-react-to-an-existing-project#using-react-for-a-part-of-your-existing-page) They have many root components instead of a single one for the entire page. You can use as much—or as little—React as you need.
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src/content/reference/react-dom/client/createRoot.md

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This can feel very slow! To solve this, you can generate the initial HTML from your components [on the server or during the build.](/reference/react-dom/server) Then your visitors can read text, see images, and click links before any of the JavaScript code loads. We recommend [using a framework](/learn/start-a-new-react-project#full-stack-frameworks) that does this optimization out of the box. Depending on when it runs, this is called *server-side rendering (SSR)* or *static site generation (SSG).*
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This can feel very slow! To solve this, you can generate the initial HTML from your components [on the server or during the build.](/reference/react-dom/server) Then your visitors can read text, see images, and click links before any of the JavaScript code loads. We recommend [using a framework](/learn/creating-a-react-app#full-stack-frameworks) that does this optimization out of the box. Depending on when it runs, this is called *server-side rendering (SSR)* or *static site generation (SSG).*
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</Note>
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