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| title: Fast Refresh |
| description: Fast Refresh is a hot module reloading experience that gives you instantaneous feedback on edits made to your React components. |
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| Fast refresh is a React feature integrated into Next.js that allows you live reload the browser page while maintaining temporary client-side state when you save changes to a file. It's enabled by default in all Next.js applications on **9.4 or newer**. With Fast Refresh enabled, most edits should be visible within a second. |
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| - If you edit a file that **only exports React component(s)**, Fast Refresh will |
| update the code only for that file, and re-render your component. You can edit |
| anything in that file, including styles, rendering logic, event handlers, or |
| effects. |
| - If you edit a file with exports that _aren't_ React components, Fast Refresh |
| will re-run both that file, and the other files importing it. So if both |
| `Button.js` and `Modal.js` import `theme.js`, editing `theme.js` will update |
| both components. |
| - Finally, if you **edit a file** that's **imported by files outside of the |
| React tree**, Fast Refresh **will fall back to doing a full reload**. You |
| might have a file which renders a React component but also exports a value |
| that is imported by a **non-React component**. For example, maybe your |
| component also exports a constant, and a non-React utility file imports it. In |
| that case, consider migrating the constant to a separate file and importing it |
| into both files. This will re-enable Fast Refresh to work. Other cases can |
| usually be solved in a similar way. |
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| If you make a syntax error during development, you can fix it and save the file |
| again. The error will disappear automatically, so you won't need to reload the |
| app. **You will not lose component state**. |
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| If you make a mistake that leads to a runtime error inside your component, |
| you'll be greeted with a contextual overlay. Fixing the error will automatically |
| dismiss the overlay, without reloading the app. |
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| Component state will be retained if the error did not occur during rendering. If |
| the error did occur during rendering, React will remount your application using |
| the updated code. |
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| If you have [error boundaries](https://react.dev/reference/react/Component |
| in your app (which is a good idea for graceful failures in production), they |
| will retry rendering on the next edit after a rendering error. This means having |
| an error boundary can prevent you from always getting reset to the root app |
| state. However, keep in mind that error boundaries shouldn't be _too_ granular. |
| They are used by React in production, and should always be designed |
| intentionally. |
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| Fast Refresh tries to preserve local React state in the component you're |
| editing, but only if it's safe to do so. Here's a few reasons why you might see |
| local state being reset on every edit to a file: |
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| - Local state is not preserved for class components (only function components |
| and Hooks preserve state). |
| - The file you're editing might have _other_ exports in addition to a React |
| component. |
| - Sometimes, a file would export the result of calling a higher-order component |
| like `HOC(WrappedComponent)`. If the returned component is a |
| class, its state will be reset. |
| - Anonymous arrow functions like `export default () => <div />;` cause Fast Refresh to not preserve local component state. For large codebases you can use our [`name-default-component` codemod](/docs/pages/guides/upgrading/codemods |
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| As more of your codebase moves to function components and Hooks, you can expect |
| state to be preserved in more cases. |
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| - Fast Refresh preserves React local state in function components (and Hooks) by |
| default. |
| - Sometimes you might want to _force_ the state to be reset, and a component to |
| be remounted. For example, this can be handy if you're tweaking an animation |
| that only happens on mount. To do this, you can add `// @refresh reset` |
| anywhere in the file you're editing. This directive is local to the file, and |
| instructs Fast Refresh to remount components defined in that file on every |
| edit. |
| - You can put `console.log` or `debugger;` into the components you edit during |
| development. |
| - Remember that imports are case sensitive. Both fast and full refresh can fail, |
| when your import doesn't match the actual filename. |
| For example, `'./header'` vs `'./Header'`. |
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| When possible, Fast Refresh attempts to preserve the state of your component |
| between edits. In particular, `useState` and `useRef` preserve their previous |
| values as long as you don't change their arguments or the order of the Hook |
| calls. |
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| Hooks with dependencies—such as `useEffect`, `useMemo`, and `useCallback`—will |
| _always_ update during Fast Refresh. Their list of dependencies will be ignored |
| while Fast Refresh is happening. |
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| For example, when you edit `useMemo(() => x * 2, [x])` to |
| `useMemo(() => x * 10, [x])`, it will re-run even though `x` (the dependency) |
| has not changed. If React didn't do that, your edit wouldn't reflect on the |
| screen! |
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| Sometimes, this can lead to unexpected results. For example, even a `useEffect` |
| with an empty array of dependencies would still re-run once during Fast Refresh. |
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| However, writing code resilient to occasional re-running of `useEffect` is a good practice even |
| without Fast Refresh. It will make it easier for you to introduce new dependencies to it later on |
| and it's enforced by [React Strict Mode](/docs/pages/api-reference/config/next-config-js/reactStrictMode), |
| which we highly recommend enabling. |
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