We are all familiar with the default renderers that comes with React - ReactDOM.
We also have custom React renderers that can be used to interface with "hosts" that aren't the DOM environment, such as mobile devices (famously React Native), VR devices, the terminal (like ink), and so on.
However, there are some custom renderers that operate within (or instead of) ReactDOM while in a browser host.
What is the purpose of custom renderers that operate within the browser host?
Some notable examples of custom renderers that operate within the browser host are:
The following snippet from react-three-fiber
threejs elements are declared in React and under the hood it will "map" to particular canvas operations:
<Canvas>
<ambientLight />
<pointLight position={[10, 10, 10]} />
<Box position={[-1.2, 0, 0]} />
<Box position={[1.2, 0, 0]} />
</Canvas>
react-three-fiber
is using a custom renderer to achieve the above, but I think it could also be achieved with side effects. Box could have a useEffect
that performs operations against the threejs instance.
So why choose a custom renderer? I believe it may be zero, one, or more of the following:
There are some interesting advantages when it comes to using a custom reconciler in React. As you see in the README.md file of react-pixi-fiber, it's totally possible to use ReactDOM to render the pixi elements instead of using the custom render from react-pixi-fiber.
Why create a custom renderer/reconciler then?
In this specific case the reason is that ReactDOM doesn't really deal with canvas elements. As you said though, that could have been achieved by a combination of custom hooks/components. If you read the why section of react-three-fiber you will see that by using their custom reconciler you can achieve two things, compared to custom components:
You can take a look here where there's an in depth explanation of the difference between render and reconcile and how the reconciler has fine grained access to: components lifecycles, decides the diffing and how elements are added/removed from the view (be in DOM, canvas, iOS etc).