/** * These are types for things that are present in the `experimental` builds of React but not yet * on a stable build. * * Once they are promoted to stable they can just be moved to the main index file. * * To load the types declared here in an actual project, there are three ways. The easiest one, * if your `tsconfig.json` already has a `"types"` array in the `"compilerOptions"` section, * is to add `"react/experimental"` to the `"types"` array. * * Alternatively, a specific import syntax can to be used from a typescript file. * This module does not exist in reality, which is why the {} is important: * * ```ts * import {} from 'react/experimental' * ``` * * It is also possible to include it through a triple-slash reference: * * ```ts * /// * ``` * * Either the import or the reference only needs to appear once, anywhere in the project. */ // See https://github.com/facebook/react/blob/master/packages/react/src/React.js to see how the exports are declared, // and https://github.com/facebook/react/blob/master/packages/shared/ReactFeatureFlags.js to verify which APIs are // flagged experimental or not. Experimental APIs will be tagged with `__EXPERIMENTAL__`. // // For the inputs of types exported as simply a fiber tag, the `beginWork` function of ReactFiberBeginWork.js // is a good place to start looking for details; it generally calls prop validation functions or delegates // all tasks done as part of the render phase (the concurrent part of the React update cycle). // // Suspense-related handling can be found in ReactFiberThrow.js. import React = require('./next'); export {}; declare module '.' { export type SuspenseListRevealOrder = 'forwards' | 'backwards' | 'together'; export type SuspenseListTailMode = 'collapsed' | 'hidden'; export interface SuspenseListCommonProps { /** * Note that SuspenseList require more than one child; * it is a runtime warning to provide only a single child. * * It does, however, allow those children to be wrapped inside a single * level of ``. */ children: ReactElement | Iterable; } interface DirectionalSuspenseListProps extends SuspenseListCommonProps { /** * Defines the order in which the `SuspenseList` children should be revealed. */ revealOrder: 'forwards' | 'backwards'; /** * Dictates how unloaded items in a SuspenseList is shown. * * - By default, `SuspenseList` will show all fallbacks in the list. * - `collapsed` shows only the next fallback in the list. * - `hidden` doesn’t show any unloaded items. */ tail?: SuspenseListTailMode | undefined; } interface NonDirectionalSuspenseListProps extends SuspenseListCommonProps { /** * Defines the order in which the `SuspenseList` children should be revealed. */ revealOrder?: Exclude | undefined; /** * The tail property is invalid when not using the `forwards` or `backwards` reveal orders. */ tail?: never | undefined; } export type SuspenseListProps = DirectionalSuspenseListProps | NonDirectionalSuspenseListProps; /** * `SuspenseList` helps coordinate many components that can suspend by orchestrating the order * in which these components are revealed to the user. * * When multiple components need to fetch data, this data may arrive in an unpredictable order. * However, if you wrap these items in a `SuspenseList`, React will not show an item in the list * until previous items have been displayed (this behavior is adjustable). * * @see https://reactjs.org/docs/concurrent-mode-reference.html#suspenselist * @see https://reactjs.org/docs/concurrent-mode-patterns.html#suspenselist */ export const SuspenseList: ExoticComponent; /** * @param effect Imperative function that can return a cleanup function * @param deps If present, effect will only activate if the values in the list change. * * @see https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/21913 */ export function unstable_useInsertionEffect(effect: EffectCallback, deps?: DependencyList): void; }