preloadModule
lets you eagerly fetch an ESM module that you expect to use.
preloadModule("https://example.com/module.js", {as: "script"});
Reference
preloadModule(href, options)
To preload an ESM module, call the preloadModule
function from react-dom
.
import { preloadModule } from 'react-dom';
function AppRoot() {
preloadModule("https://example.com/module.js", {as: "script"});
// ...
}
The preloadModule
function provides the browser with a hint that it should start downloading the given module, which can save time.
Parameters
href
: a string. The URL of the module you want to download.options
: an object. It contains the following properties:as
: a required string. It must be'script'
.crossOrigin
: a string. The CORS policy to use. Its possible values areanonymous
anduse-credentials
.integrity
: a string. A cryptographic hash of the module, to verify its authenticity.nonce
: a string. A cryptographic nonce to allow the module when using a strict Content Security Policy.
Returns
preloadModule
returns nothing.
Caveats
- Multiple calls to
preloadModule
with the samehref
have the same effect as a single call. - In the browser, you can call
preloadModule
in any situation: while rendering a component, in an effect, in an event handler, and so on. - In server-side rendering or when rendering Server Components,
preloadModule
only has an effect if you call it while rendering a component or in an async context originating from rendering a component. Any other calls will be ignored.
Usage
Preloading when rendering
Call preloadModule
when rendering a component if you know that it or its children will use a specific module.
import { preloadModule } from 'react-dom';
function AppRoot() {
preloadModule("https://example.com/module.js", {as: "script"});
return ...;
}
If you want the browser to start executing the module immediately (rather than just downloading it), use preinitModule
instead. If you want to load a script that isn’t an ESM module, use preload
.
Preloading in an event handler
Call preloadModule
in an event handler before transitioning to a page or state where the module will be needed. This gets the process started earlier than if you call it during the rendering of the new page or state.
import { preloadModule } from 'react-dom';
function CallToAction() {
const onClick = () => {
preloadModule("https://example.com/module.js", {as: "script"});
startWizard();
}
return (
<button onClick={onClick}>Start Wizard</button>
);
}