The fastest deep equal comparison for React. Very quick general-purpose deep comparison, too. Great for React.memo and shouldComponentUpdate.
This is a fork of the brilliant fast-deep-equal with some extra handling for React.
(Check out the benchmarking details.)
$ yarn add react-fast-compare # or $ npm install react-fast-compare- ES5 compatible; works in node.js (0.10+) and browsers (IE9+)
- deeply compares any value (besides objects with circular references)
- handles React-specific circular references, like elements
- checks equality Date and RegExp objects
- should be as fast as fast-deep-equal via a single unified library, and with added guardrails for circular references.
- small: under 660 bytes minified+gzipped
const isEqual = require("react-fast-compare"); // general usage console.log(isEqual({ foo: "bar" }, { foo: "bar" })); // true // React.memo // only re-render ExpensiveComponent when the props have deeply changed const DeepMemoComponent = React.memo(ExpensiveComponent, isEqual); // React.Component shouldComponentUpdate // only re-render AnotherExpensiveComponent when the props have deeply changed class AnotherExpensiveComponent extends React.Component { shouldComponentUpdate(nextProps) { return !isEqual(this.props, nextProps); } render() { // ... } }What's faster than a really fast deep comparison? No deep comparison at all.
—This Readme
Deep checks in React.memo or a shouldComponentUpdate should not be used blindly. First, see if the default React.memo or PureComponent will work for you. If it won't (if you need deep checks), it's wise to make sure you've correctly indentified the bottleneck in your application by profiling the performance. After you've determined that you do need deep equality checks and you've identified the minimum number of places to apply them, then this library may be for you!
The absolute values are much less important than the relative differences between packages.
Benchmarking source can be found here. Each "operation" consists of running all relevant tests. The React benchmark uses both the generic tests and the react tests; these runs will be slower simply because there are more tests in each operation.
The results below are from a local test on a laptop (stats last updated 6/2/2020):
react-fast-compare x 177,600 ops/sec ±1.73% (92 runs sampled) fast-deep-equal x 184,211 ops/sec ±0.65% (87 runs sampled) lodash.isEqual x 39,826 ops/sec ±1.32% (86 runs sampled) nano-equal x 176,023 ops/sec ±0.89% (92 runs sampled) shallow-equal-fuzzy x 146,355 ops/sec ±0.64% (89 runs sampled) fastest: fast-deep-equal react-fast-compare and fast-deep-equal should be the same speed for these tests; any difference is just noise. react-fast-compare won't be faster than fast-deep-equal, because it's based on it.
react-fast-compare x 86,392 ops/sec ±0.70% (93 runs sampled) fast-deep-equal x 85,567 ops/sec ±0.95% (92 runs sampled) lodash.isEqual x 7,369 ops/sec ±1.78% (84 runs sampled) fastest: react-fast-compare,fast-deep-equal Two of these packages cannot handle comparing React elements, because they contain circular reference: nano-equal and shallow-equal-fuzzy.
$ yarn install $ yarn run benchmarkreact-fast-compare is based on fast-deep-equal, with some additions:
react-fast-comparehastry/catchguardrails for stack overflows from undetected (non-React) circular references.react-fast-comparehas a single unified entry point for all uses. No matter what your target application is,import equal from 'react-fast-compare'just works.fast-deep-equalhas multiple entry points for different use cases.
This version of react-fast-compare tracks fast-deep-equal@3.1.1.
There are a variety of ways to calculate bundle size for JavaScript code. You can see our size test code in the compress script in package.json. Bundlephobia's calculation is slightly higher, as they do not mangle during minification.
Please see our contributions guide.
Active: Formidable is actively working on this project, and we expect to continue for work for the foreseeable future. Bug reports, feature requests and pull requests are welcome.

