| > No, they are JavaScript, it is array based programming wrapped Javascript has no support for array-based programming. So, hooks are not Javascript: they look like regular function calls, but: - they can only be declared and called before rendering - they can't be called out of order - they cannot be called conditionally - they have to be called a specific name to be handled correctly by React runtime - some (but not all of them) require dependency lists that determine how they are invoked > {#await promise} is more cryptic than any useHook function implementation. usEffect documentation is something like 20 pages long. The use of {#await promise} is immediately understandable from the code example, and its entire documentation fits on a page and a half |
I completely agree that learning them is a bit crazy, but ultimately every hook comes down to being a function execution.