
component-refactoring
BeliebtRefactor high-complexity React components in Dify frontend. Use when `pnpm analyze-component --json` shows complexity > 50 or lineCount > 300, when the user asks for code splitting, hook extraction, or complexity reduction, or when `pnpm analyze-component` warns to refactor before testing; avoid for simple/well-structured components, third-party wrappers, or when the user explicitly wants testing without refactoring.
Refactor high-complexity React components in Dify frontend. Use when `pnpm analyze-component --json` shows complexity > 50 or lineCount > 300, when the user asks for code splitting, hook extraction, or complexity reduction, or when `pnpm analyze-component` warns to refactor before testing; avoid for simple/well-structured components, third-party wrappers, or when the user explicitly wants testing without refactoring.
Dify Component Refactoring Skill
Refactor high-complexity React components in the Dify frontend codebase with the patterns and workflow below.
Complexity Threshold: Components with complexity > 50 (measured by
pnpm analyze-component) should be refactored before testing.
Quick Reference
Commands (run from web/)
Use paths relative to web/ (e.g., app/components/...).
Use refactor-component for refactoring prompts and analyze-component for testing prompts and metrics.
cd web
# Generate refactoring prompt
pnpm refactor-component <path>
# Output refactoring analysis as JSON
pnpm refactor-component <path> --json
# Generate testing prompt (after refactoring)
pnpm analyze-component <path>
# Output testing analysis as JSON
pnpm analyze-component <path> --json
Complexity Analysis
# Analyze component complexity
pnpm analyze-component <path> --json
# Key metrics to check:
# - complexity: normalized score 0-100 (target < 50)
# - maxComplexity: highest single function complexity
# - lineCount: total lines (target < 300)
Complexity Score Interpretation
| Score | Level | Action |
|---|---|---|
| 0-25 | 🟢 Simple | Ready for testing |
| 26-50 | 🟡 Medium | Consider minor refactoring |
| 51-75 | 🟠 Complex | Refactor before testing |
| 76-100 | 🔴 Very Complex | Must refactor |
Core Refactoring Patterns
Pattern 1: Extract Custom Hooks
When: Component has complex state management, multiple useState/useEffect, or business logic mixed with UI.
Dify Convention: Place hooks in a hooks/ subdirectory or alongside the component as use-<feature>.ts.
// ❌ Before: Complex state logic in component
const Configuration: FC = () => {
const [modelConfig, setModelConfig] = useState<ModelConfig>(...)
const [datasetConfigs, setDatasetConfigs] = useState<DatasetConfigs>(...)
const [completionParams, setCompletionParams] = useState<FormValue>({})
// 50+ lines of state management logic...
return <div>...</div>
}
// ✅ After: Extract to custom hook
// hooks/use-model-config.ts
export const useModelConfig = (appId: string) => {
const [modelConfig, setModelConfig] = useState<ModelConfig>(...)
const [completionParams, setCompletionParams] = useState<FormValue>({})
// Related state management logic here
return { modelConfig, setModelConfig, completionParams, setCompletionParams }
}
// Component becomes cleaner
const Configuration: FC = () => {
const { modelConfig, setModelConfig } = useModelConfig(appId)
return <div>...</div>
}
Dify Examples:
web/app/components/app/configuration/hooks/use-advanced-prompt-config.tsweb/app/components/app/configuration/debug/hooks.tsxweb/app/components/workflow/hooks/use-workflow.ts
Pattern 2: Extract Sub-Components
When: Single component has multiple UI sections, conditional rendering blocks, or repeated patterns.
Dify Convention: Place sub-components in subdirectories or as separate files in the same directory.
// ❌ Before: Monolithic JSX with multiple sections
const AppInfo = () => {
return (
<div>
{/* 100 lines of header UI */}
{/* 100 lines of operations UI */}
{/* 100 lines of modals */}
</div>
)
}
// ✅ After: Split into focused components
// app-info/
// ├── index.tsx (orchestration only)
// ├── app-header.tsx (header UI)
// ├── app-operations.tsx (operations UI)
// └── app-modals.tsx (modal management)
const AppInfo = () => {
const { showModal, setShowModal } = useAppInfoModals()
return (
<div>
<AppHeader appDetail={appDetail} />
<AppOperations onAction={handleAction} />
<AppModals show={showModal} onClose={() => setShowModal(null)} />
</div>
)
}
Dify Examples:
web/app/components/app/configuration/directory structureweb/app/components/workflow/nodes/per-node organization
Pattern 3: Simplify Conditional Logic
When: Deep nesting (> 3 levels), complex ternaries, or multiple if/else chains.
// ❌ Before: Deeply nested conditionals
const Template = useMemo(() => {
if (appDetail?.mode === AppModeEnum.CHAT) {
switch (locale) {
case LanguagesSupported[1]:
return <TemplateChatZh />
case LanguagesSupported[7]:
return <TemplateChatJa />
default:
return <TemplateChatEn />
}
}
if (appDetail?.mode === AppModeEnum.ADVANCED_CHAT) {
// Another 15 lines...
}
// More conditions...
}, [appDetail, locale])
// ✅ After: Use lookup tables + early returns
const TEMPLATE_MAP = {
[AppModeEnum.CHAT]: {
[LanguagesSupported[1]]: TemplateChatZh,
[LanguagesSupported[7]]: TemplateChatJa,
default: TemplateChatEn,
},
[AppModeEnum.ADVANCED_CHAT]: {
[LanguagesSupported[1]]: TemplateAdvancedChatZh,
// ...
},
}
const Template = useMemo(() => {
const modeTemplates = TEMPLATE_MAP[appDetail?.mode]
if (!modeTemplates) return null
const TemplateComponent = modeTemplates[locale] || modeTemplates.default
return <TemplateComponent appDetail={appDetail} />
}, [appDetail, locale])
Pattern 4: Extract API/Data Logic
When: Component directly handles API calls, data transformation, or complex async operations.
Dify Convention: Use @tanstack/react-query hooks from web/service/use-*.ts or create custom data hooks.
// ❌ Before: API logic in component
const MCPServiceCard = () => {
const [basicAppConfig, setBasicAppConfig] = useState({})
useEffect(() => {
if (isBasicApp && appId) {
(async () => {
const res = await fetchAppDetail({ url: '/apps', id: appId })
setBasicAppConfig(res?.model_config || {})
})()
}
}, [appId, isBasicApp])
// More API-related logic...
}
// ✅ After: Extract to data hook using React Query
// use-app-config.ts
import { useQuery } from '@tanstack/react-query'
import { get } from '@/service/base'
const NAME_SPACE = 'appConfig'
export const useAppConfig = (appId: string, isBasicApp: boolean) => {
return useQuery({
enabled: isBasicApp && !!appId,
queryKey: [NAME_SPACE, 'detail', appId],
queryFn: () => get<AppDetailResponse>(`/apps/${appId}`),
select: data => data?.model_config || {},
})
}
// Component becomes cleaner
const MCPServiceCard = () => {
const { data: config, isLoading } = useAppConfig(appId, isBasicApp)
// UI only
}
React Query Best Practices in Dify:
- Define
NAME_SPACEfor query key organization - Use
enabledoption for conditional fetching - Use
selectfor data transformation - Export invalidation hooks:
useInvalidXxx
Dify Examples:
web/service/use-workflow.tsweb/service/use-common.tsweb/service/knowledge/use-dataset.tsweb/service/knowledge/use-document.ts
Pattern 5: Extract Modal/Dialog Management
When: Component manages multiple modals with complex open/close states.
Dify Convention: Modals should be extracted with their state management.
// ❌ Before: Multiple modal states in component
const AppInfo = () => {
const [showEditModal, setShowEditModal] = useState(false)
const [showDuplicateModal, setShowDuplicateModal] = useState(false)
const [showConfirmDelete, setShowConfirmDelete] = useState(false)
const [showSwitchModal, setShowSwitchModal] = useState(false)
const [showImportDSLModal, setShowImportDSLModal] = useState(false)
// 5+ more modal states...
}
// ✅ After: Extract to modal management hook
type ModalType = 'edit' | 'duplicate' | 'delete' | 'switch' | 'import' | null
const useAppInfoModals = () => {
const [activeModal, setActiveModal] = useState<ModalType>(null)
const openModal = useCallback((type: ModalType) => setActiveModal(type), [])
const closeModal = useCallback(() => setActiveModal(null), [])
return {
activeModal,
openModal,
closeModal,
isOpen: (type: ModalType) => activeModal === type,
}
}
Pattern 6: Extract Form Logic
When: Complex form validation, submission handling, or field transformation.
Dify Convention: Use @tanstack/react-form patterns from web/app/components/base/form/.
// ✅ Use existing form infrastructure
import { useAppForm } from '@/app/components/base/form'
const ConfigForm = () => {
const form = useAppForm({
defaultValues: { name: '', description: '' },
onSubmit: handleSubmit,
})
return <form.Provider>...</form.Provider>
}
Dify-Specific Refactoring Guidelines
1. Context Provider Extraction
When: Component provides complex context values with multiple states.
// ❌ Before: Large context value object
const value = {
appId, isAPIKeySet, isTrailFinished, mode, modelModeType,
promptMode, isAdvancedMode, isAgent, isOpenAI, isFunctionCall,
// 50+ more properties...
}
return <ConfigContext.Provider value={value}>...</ConfigContext.Provider>
// ✅ After: Split into domain-specific contexts
<ModelConfigProvider value={modelConfigValue}>
<DatasetConfigProvider value={datasetConfigValue}>
<UIConfigProvider value={uiConfigValue}>
{children}
</UIConfigProvider>
</DatasetConfigProvider>
</ModelConfigProvider>
Dify Reference: web/context/ directory structure
2. Workflow Node Components
When: Refactoring workflow node components (web/app/components/workflow/nodes/).
Conventions:
- Keep node logic in
use-interactions.ts - Extract panel UI to separate files
- Use
_basecomponents for common patterns
nodes/<node-type>/
├── index.tsx # Node registration
├── node.tsx # Node visual component
├── panel.tsx # Configuration panel
├── use-interactions.ts # Node-specific hooks
└── types.ts # Type definitions
3. Configuration Components
When: Refactoring app configuration components.
Conventions:
- Separate config sections into subdirectories
- Use existing patterns from
web/app/components/app/configuration/ - Keep feature toggles in dedicated components
4. Tool/Plugin Components
When: Refactoring tool-related components (web/app/components/tools/).
Conventions:
- Follow existing modal patterns
- Use service hooks from
web/service/use-tools.ts - Keep provider-specific logic isolated
Refactoring Workflow
Step 1: Generate Refactoring Prompt
pnpm refactor-component <path>
This command will:
- Analyze component complexity and features
- Identify specific refactoring actions needed
- Generate a prompt for AI assistant (auto-copied to clipboard on macOS)
- Provide detailed requirements based on detected patterns
Step 2: Analyze Details
pnpm analyze-component <path> --json
Identify:
- Total complexity score
- Max function complexity
- Line count
- Features detected (state, effects, API, etc.)
Step 3: Plan
Create a refactoring plan based on detected features:
| Detected Feature | Refactoring Action |
|---|---|
hasState: true + hasEffects: true |
Extract custom hook |
hasAPI: true |
Extract data/service hook |
hasEvents: true (many) |
Extract event handlers |
lineCount > 300 |
Split into sub-components |
maxComplexity > 50 |
Simplify conditional logic |
Step 4: Execute Incrementally
- Extract one piece at a time
- Run lint, type-check, and tests after each extraction
- Verify functionality before next step
For each extraction:
┌────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ 1. Extract code │
│ 2. Run: pnpm lint:fix │
│ 3. Run: pnpm type-check:tsgo │
│ 4. Run: pnpm test │
│ 5. Test functionality manually │
│ 6. PASS? → Next extraction │
│ FAIL? → Fix before continuing │
└────────────────────────────────────────┘
Step 5: Verify
After refactoring:
# Re-run refactor command to verify improvements
pnpm refactor-component <path>
# If complexity < 25 and lines < 200, you'll see:
# ✅ COMPONENT IS WELL-STRUCTURED
# For detailed metrics:
pnpm analyze-component <path> --json
# Target metrics:
# - complexity < 50
# - lineCount < 300
# - maxComplexity < 30
Common Mistakes to Avoid
❌ Over-Engineering
// ❌ Too many tiny hooks
const useButtonText = () => useState('Click')
const useButtonDisabled = () => useState(false)
const useButtonLoading = () => useState(false)
// ✅ Cohesive hook with related state
const useButtonState = () => {
const [text, setText] = useState('Click')
const [disabled, setDisabled] = useState(false)
const [loading, setLoading] = useState(false)
return { text, setText, disabled, setDisabled, loading, setLoading }
}
❌ Breaking Existing Patterns
- Follow existing directory structures
- Maintain naming conventions
- Preserve export patterns for compatibility
❌ Premature Abstraction
- Only extract when there's clear complexity benefit
- Don't create abstractions for single-use code
- Keep refactored code in the same domain area
References
Dify Codebase Examples
- Hook extraction:
web/app/components/app/configuration/hooks/ - Component splitting:
web/app/components/app/configuration/ - Service hooks:
web/service/use-*.ts - Workflow patterns:
web/app/components/workflow/hooks/ - Form patterns:
web/app/components/base/form/
Related Skills
frontend-testing- For testing refactored componentsweb/docs/test.md- Testing specification
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