![]() Okay, I know what you’re thinking: Let’s get rocking and rolling. I highly recommend reading through the article first, but I have also included a video tutorial at the end of the article, a link to the repository that includes the code, and links to the second and third parts of the series. You should notice that here we are extending the React.Component class in order to declare that this specific class is going to be a React component. ![]() We will achieve this by tapping into useEffect and some new memoization helpers.
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