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list performance function references

Don't map or filter data before passing to virtualized lists. Virtualization relies on object reference stability to know what changed—new references cause full re-renders of all visible items. Attempt to prevent frequent renders at the list-parent level.

Claude Code Knowledge Pack7/10/2026

Overview

Optimize List Performance with Stable Object References

Don't map or filter data before passing to virtualized lists. Virtualization relies on object reference stability to know what changed—new references cause full re-renders of all visible items. Attempt to prevent frequent renders at the list-parent level.

Where needed, use context selectors within list items.

Incorrect (creates new object references on every keystroke):

function DomainSearch() {
  const { keyword, setKeyword } = useKeywordZustandState()
  const { data: tlds } = useTlds()

  // Bad: creates new objects on every render, reparenting the entire list on every keystroke
  const domains = tlds.map((tld) => ({
    domain: `${keyword}.${tld.name}`,
    tld: tld.name,
    price: tld.price,
  }))

  return (
    <>
      
       }
      />
    </>
  )
}

Correct (stable references, transform inside items):

const renderItem = ({ item }) => 

function DomainSearch() {
  const { data: tlds } = useTlds()

  return (
    
  )
}

function DomainItem({ tld }: { tld: Tld }) {
  // good: transform within items, and don't pass the dynamic data as a prop
  // good: use a selector function from zustand to receive a stable string back
  const domain = useKeywordZustandState((s) => s.keyword + '.' + tld.name)
  return {domain}
}

Updating parent array reference:

Creating a new array instance can be okay, as long as its inner object references are stable. For instance, if you sort a list of objects:

// good: creates a new array instance without mutating the inner objects
// good: parent array reference is unaffected by typing and updating "keyword"
const sortedTlds = tlds.toSorted((a, b) => a.name.localeCompare(b.name))

return 

Even though this creates a new array instance sortedTlds, the inner object references are stable.

With zustand for dynamic data (avoids parent re-renders):

const useSearchStore = create<{ keyword: string }>(() => ({ keyword: '' }))

function DomainSearch() {
  const { data: tlds } = useTlds()

  return (
    <>
      
       }
      />
    </>
  )
}

function DomainItem({ tld }: { tld: Tld }) {
  // Select only what you need—component only re-renders when keyword changes
  const keyword = useSearchStore((s) => s.keyword)
  const domain = `${keyword}.${tld.name}`
  return {domain}
}

Virtualization can now skip items that haven't changed when typing. Only visible items (~20) re-render on keystroke, rather than the parent.

Deriving state within list items based on parent data (avoids parent re-renders):

For components where the data is conditional based on the parent state, this pattern is even more important. For example, if you are checking if an item is favorited, toggling favorites only re-renders one component if the item itself is in charge of accessing the state rather than the parent:

function DomainItemFavoriteButton({ tld }: { tld: Tld }) {
  const isFavorited = useFavoritesStore((s) => s.favorites.has(tld.id))
  return 
}

Note: if you're using the React Compiler, you can read React Context values directly within list items. Although this is slightly slower than using a Zustand selector in most cases, the effect may be negligible.