It fixes some long-standing issues with both React Hot Loader and React Transform.
It is intended as a replacement for both.
Some nice things about it:
- Editing functional components preserves state
- Works great with higher order components
- Requires little configuration
- Automatically disabled in production
- Works with or without Babel (you can remove
react-hot-loader/babel
from.babelrc
and instead addreact-hot-loader/webpack
toloaders
)
Check out the Migration to 3.0 guide to learn how to migrate your app to 3.0.
npm install --save react-hot-loader@next
If you want to try hot reloading in a new project, try one of the starter kits.
Provided by owner and collaborators:
To use React Hot Loader in an existing project, you need to
- switch to Webpack for builds (instead of RequireJS or Browserify);
- enable Hot Module Replacement, which is a Webpack feature;
- configure Webpack to use React Hot Loader for JS or JSX files.
These steps are covered by the Migration to 3.0 guide.
If you'd rather stay with Browserify, check out LiveReactload by Matti Lankinen.
- React Router v3 is not fully supported (e.g. async routes). If you want to get most of React Hot Loader, consider switching to React Router v4. If you want to understand the reasoning, it's good to start in React Router v4 FAQ
React Hot Loader was demoed together with Redux at React Europe. Watch Dan Abramov's talk on Hot Reloading with Time Travel.
React Native supports hot reloading natively as of version 0.22.
If something doesn't work, in 99% cases it's a configuration issue. A missing option, a wrong path or port. Webpack is very strict about configuration, and the best way to find out what's wrong is to compare your project to an already working setup, such as React Hot Boilerplate, bit by bit. We're also gathering Troubleshooting Recipes so send a PR if you have a lesson to share!
Check out the docs directory.
You can also check out a great webpack guide to React hot module replacement.
Watch the repo to stay tuned!
The work on React Hot Loader, React Transform, Redux, and related projects was funded by the community. Meet some of the outstanding companies that made it possible: