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Bump the react group across 1 directory with 6 updates #1545

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@dependabot dependabot bot commented on behalf of github Feb 24, 2025

Bumps the react group with 6 updates in the /web directory:

Package From To
@reduxjs/toolkit 2.2.7 2.6.0
react 18.3.1 19.0.0
@types/react 18.3.5 19.0.10
react-dom 18.3.1 19.0.0
@types/react-dom 18.3.0 19.0.4
react-redux 9.1.2 9.2.0

Updates @reduxjs/toolkit from 2.2.7 to 2.6.0

Release notes

Sourced from @​reduxjs/toolkit's releases.

v2.6.0

This feature release adds infinite query support to RTK Query.

Changelog

RTK Query Infinite Query support

Since we first released RTK Query in 2021, we've had users asking us to add support for "infinite queries" - the ability to keep fetching additional pages of data for a given endpoint. It's been by far our most requested feature. Until recently, our answer was that we felt there were too many use cases to support with a single API design approach.

Last year, we revisited this concept and concluded that the best approach was to mimic the flexible infinite query API design from React Query. We had additional discussions with @​tkdodo , who described the rationale and implementation approach and encouraged us to use their API design, and @​riqts provided an initial implementation on top of RTKQ's existing internals.

We're excited to announce that this release officially adds full infinite query endpoint support to RTK Query!

Using Infinite Queries

As with React Query, the API design is based around "page param" values that act as the query arguments for fetching a specific page for the given cache entry.

Infinite queries are defined with a new build.infiniteQuery() endpoint type. It accepts all of the same options as normal query endpoints, but also needs an additional infiniteQueryOptions field that specifies the infinite query behaviors. With TypeScript, you must supply 3 generic arguments: build.infiniteQuery<ResultType, QueryArg, PageParam>, where ResultType is the contents of a single page, QueryArg is the type passed in as the cache key, and PageParam is the value used to request a specific page.

The endpoint must define an initialPageParam value that will be used as the default (and can be overridden if desired). It also needs a getNextPageParam callback that will calculate the params for each page based on the existing values, and optionally a getPreviousPageParam callback if reverse fetching is needed. Finally, a maxPages option can be provided to limit the entry cache size.

The query and queryFn methods now receive a {queryArg, pageParam} object, instead of just the queryArg.

For the cache entries and hooks, the data field is now an object like {pages: ResultType[], pageParams: PageParam[]>. This gives you flexibility in how you use the data for rendering.

const pokemonApi = createApi({
  baseQuery: fetchBaseQuery({ baseUrl: 'https://example.com/pokemon' }),
  endpoints: (build) => ({
    // 3 TS generics: page contents, query arg, page param
    getInfinitePokemonWithMax: build.infiniteQuery<Pokemon[], string, number>({
      infiniteQueryOptions: {
        // Must provide a default initial page param value
        initialPageParam: 1,
        // Optionally limit the number of cached pages
        maxPages: 3,
        // Must provide a `getNextPageParam` function
        getNextPageParam: (lastPage, allPages, lastPageParam, allPageParams) =>
          lastPageParam + 1,
        // Optionally provide a `getPreviousPageParam` function
        getPreviousPageParam: (
          firstPage,
          allPages,
          firstPageParam,
          allPageParams,
        ) => {
          return firstPageParam > 0 ? firstPageParam - 1 : undefined
        },
      },
      // The `query` function receives `{queryArg, pageParam}` as its argument
</tr></table> 

... (truncated)

Commits

Updates react from 18.3.1 to 19.0.0

Release notes

Sourced from react's releases.

19.0.0 (December 5, 2024)

Below is a list of all new features, APIs, deprecations, and breaking changes. Read React 19 release post and React 19 upgrade guide for more information.

Note: To help make the upgrade to React 19 easier, we’ve published a [email protected] release that is identical to 18.2 but adds warnings for deprecated APIs and other changes that are needed for React 19. We recommend upgrading to React 18.3.1 first to help identify any issues before upgrading to React 19.

New Features

React

  • Actions: startTransition can now accept async functions. Functions passed to startTransition are called “Actions”. A given Transition can include one or more Actions which update state in the background and update the UI with one commit. In addition to updating state, Actions can now perform side effects including async requests, and the Action will wait for the work to finish before finishing the Transition. This feature allows Transitions to include side effects like fetch() in the pending state, and provides support for error handling, and optimistic updates.
  • useActionState: is a new hook to order Actions inside of a Transition with access to the state of the action, and the pending state. It accepts a reducer that can call Actions, and the initial state used for first render. It also accepts an optional string that is used if the action is passed to a form action prop to support progressive enhancement in forms.
  • useOptimistic: is a new hook to update state while a Transition is in progress. It returns the state, and a set function that can be called inside a transition to “optimistically” update the state to expected final value immediately while the Transition completes in the background. When the transition finishes, the state is updated to the new value.
  • use: is a new API that allows reading resources in render. In React 19, use accepts a promise or Context. If provided a promise, use will suspend until a value is resolved. use can only be used in render but can be called conditionally.
  • ref as a prop: Refs can now be used as props, removing the need for forwardRef.
  • Suspense sibling pre-warming: When a component suspends, React will immediately commit the fallback of the nearest Suspense boundary, without waiting for the entire sibling tree to render. After the fallback commits, React will schedule another render for the suspended siblings to “pre-warm” lazy requests.

React DOM Client

  • <form> action prop: Form Actions allow you to manage forms automatically and integrate with useFormStatus. When a <form> action succeeds, React will automatically reset the form for uncontrolled components. The form can be reset manually with the new requestFormReset API.
  • <button> and <input> formAction prop: Actions can be passed to the formAction prop to configure form submission behavior. This allows using different Actions depending on the input.
  • useFormStatus: is a new hook that provides the status of the parent <form> action, as if the form was a Context provider. The hook returns the values: pending, data, method, and action.
  • Support for Document Metadata: We’ve added support for rendering document metadata tags in components natively. React will automatically hoist them into the <head> section of the document.
  • Support for Stylesheets: React 19 will ensure stylesheets are inserted into the <head> on the client before revealing the content of a Suspense boundary that depends on that stylesheet.
  • Support for async scripts: Async scripts can be rendered anywhere in the component tree and React will handle ordering and deduplication.
  • Support for preloading resources: React 19 ships with preinit, preload, prefetchDNS, and preconnect APIs to optimize initial page loads by moving discovery of additional resources like fonts out of stylesheet loading. They can also be used to prefetch resources used by an anticipated navigation.

React DOM Server

  • Added prerender and prerenderToNodeStream APIs for static site generation. They are designed to work with streaming environments like Node.js Streams and Web Streams. Unlike renderToString, they wait for data to load for HTML generation.

React Server Components

  • RSC features such as directives, server components, and server functions are now stable. This means libraries that ship with Server Components can now target React 19 as a peer dependency with a react-server export condition for use in frameworks that support the Full-stack React Architecture. The underlying APIs used to implement a React Server Components bundler or framework do not follow semver and may break between minors in React 19.x. See docs for how to support React Server Components.

Deprecations

  • Deprecated: element.ref access: React 19 supports ref as a prop, so we’re deprecating element.ref in favor of element.props.ref. Accessing will result in a warning.
  • react-test-renderer: In React 19, react-test-renderer logs a deprecation warning and has switched to concurrent rendering for web usage. We recommend migrating your tests to @​testinglibrary.com/docs/react-testing-library/intro/) or @​testingesting-library.com/docs/react-native-testing-library/intro)

Breaking Changes

React 19 brings in a number of breaking changes, including the removals of long-deprecated APIs. We recommend first upgrading to 18.3.1, where we've added additional deprecation warnings. Check out the upgrade guide for more details and guidance on codemodding.

React

  • New JSX Transform is now required: We introduced a new JSX transform in 2020 to improve bundle size and use JSX without importing React. In React 19, we’re adding additional improvements like using ref as a prop and JSX speed improvements that require the new transform.
  • Errors in render are not re-thrown: Errors that are not caught by an Error Boundary are now reported to window.reportError. Errors that are caught by an Error Boundary are reported to console.error. We’ve introduced onUncaughtError and onCaughtError methods to createRoot and hydrateRoot to customize this error handling.
  • Removed: propTypes: Using propTypes will now be silently ignored. If required, we recommend migrating to TypeScript or another type-checking solution.
  • Removed: defaultProps for functions: ES6 default parameters can be used in place. Class components continue to support defaultProps since there is no ES6 alternative.
  • Removed: contextTypes and getChildContext: Legacy Context for class components has been removed in favor of the contextType API.

... (truncated)

Changelog

Sourced from react's changelog.

19.0.0 (December 5, 2024)

Below is a list of all new features, APIs, deprecations, and breaking changes. Read React 19 release post and React 19 upgrade guide for more information.

Note: To help make the upgrade to React 19 easier, we’ve published a [email protected] release that is identical to 18.2 but adds warnings for deprecated APIs and other changes that are needed for React 19. We recommend upgrading to React 18.3.1 first to help identify any issues before upgrading to React 19.

New Features

React

  • Actions: startTransition can now accept async functions. Functions passed to startTransition are called “Actions”. A given Transition can include one or more Actions which update state in the background and update the UI with one commit. In addition to updating state, Actions can now perform side effects including async requests, and the Action will wait for the work to finish before finishing the Transition. This feature allows Transitions to include side effects like fetch() in the pending state, and provides support for error handling, and optimistic updates.
  • useActionState: is a new hook to order Actions inside of a Transition with access to the state of the action, and the pending state. It accepts a reducer that can call Actions, and the initial state used for first render. It also accepts an optional string that is used if the action is passed to a form action prop to support progressive enhancement in forms.
  • useOptimistic: is a new hook to update state while a Transition is in progress. It returns the state, and a set function that can be called inside a transition to “optimistically” update the state to expected final value immediately while the Transition completes in the background. When the transition finishes, the state is updated to the new value.
  • use: is a new API that allows reading resources in render. In React 19, use accepts a promise or Context. If provided a promise, use will suspend until a value is resolved. use can only be used in render but can be called conditionally.
  • ref as a prop: Refs can now be used as props, removing the need for forwardRef.
  • Suspense sibling pre-warming: When a component suspends, React will immediately commit the fallback of the nearest Suspense boundary, without waiting for the entire sibling tree to render. After the fallback commits, React will schedule another render for the suspended siblings to “pre-warm” lazy requests.

React DOM Client

  • <form> action prop: Form Actions allow you to manage forms automatically and integrate with useFormStatus. When a <form> action succeeds, React will automatically reset the form for uncontrolled components. The form can be reset manually with the new requestFormReset API.
  • <button> and <input> formAction prop: Actions can be passed to the formAction prop to configure form submission behavior. This allows using different Actions depending on the input.
  • useFormStatus: is a new hook that provides the status of the parent <form> action, as if the form was a Context provider. The hook returns the values: pending, data, method, and action.
  • Support for Document Metadata: We’ve added support for rendering document metadata tags in components natively. React will automatically hoist them into the <head> section of the document.
  • Support for Stylesheets: React 19 will ensure stylesheets are inserted into the <head> on the client before revealing the content of a Suspense boundary that depends on that stylesheet.
  • Support for async scripts: Async scripts can be rendered anywhere in the component tree and React will handle ordering and deduplication.
  • Support for preloading resources: React 19 ships with preinit, preload, prefetchDNS, and preconnect APIs to optimize initial page loads by moving discovery of additional resources like fonts out of stylesheet loading. They can also be used to prefetch resources used by an anticipated navigation.

React DOM Server

  • Added prerender and prerenderToNodeStream APIs for static site generation. They are designed to work with streaming environments like Node.js Streams and Web Streams. Unlike renderToString, they wait for data to load for HTML generation.

React Server Components

  • RSC features such as directives, server components, and server functions are now stable. This means libraries that ship with Server Components can now target React 19 as a peer dependency with a react-server export condition for use in frameworks that support the Full-stack React Architecture. The underlying APIs used to implement a React Server Components bundler or framework do not follow semver and may break between minors in React 19.x. See docs for how to support React Server Components.

Deprecations

  • Deprecated: element.ref access: React 19 supports ref as a prop, so we’re deprecating element.ref in favor of element.props.ref. Accessing will result in a warning.
  • react-test-renderer: In React 19, react-test-renderer logs a deprecation warning and has switched to concurrent rendering for web usage. We recommend migrating your tests to @​testing-library/react or @​testing-library/react-native

Breaking Changes

React 19 brings in a number of breaking changes, including the removals of long-deprecated APIs. We recommend first upgrading to 18.3.1, where we've added additional deprecation warnings. Check out the upgrade guide for more details and guidance on codemodding.

React

  • New JSX Transform is now required: We introduced a new JSX transform in 2020 to improve bundle size and use JSX without importing React. In React 19, we’re adding additional improvements like using ref as a prop and JSX speed improvements that require the new transform.
  • Errors in render are not re-thrown: Errors that are not caught by an Error Boundary are now reported to window.reportError. Errors that are caught by an Error Boundary are reported to console.error. We’ve introduced onUncaughtError and onCaughtError methods to createRoot and hydrateRoot to customize this error handling.
  • Removed: propTypes: Using propTypes will now be silently ignored. If required, we recommend migrating to TypeScript or another type-checking solution.
  • Removed: defaultProps for functions: ES6 default parameters can be used in place. Class components continue to support defaultProps since there is no ES6 alternative.

... (truncated)

Commits
  • e137890 [string-refs] cleanup string ref code (#31443)
  • d1f0472 [string-refs] remove enableLogStringRefsProd flag (#31414)
  • 3dc1e48 Followup: remove dead test code from #30346 (#31415)
  • 07aa494 Remove enableRefAsProp feature flag (#30346)
  • 45804af [flow] Eliminate usage of more than 1-arg React.AbstractComponent in React ...
  • 5636fad [string-refs] log string ref from prod (#31161)
  • b78a7f2 [rcr] Re-export useMemoCache in top level React namespace (#31139)
  • 4e9540e [Fiber] Log the Render/Commit phases and the gaps in between (#31016)
  • d4688df [Fiber] Track Event Time, startTransition Time and setState Time (#31008)
  • 15da917 Don't read currentTransition back from internals (#30991)
  • Additional commits viewable in compare view

Updates @types/react from 18.3.5 to 19.0.10

Commits

Updates react-dom from 18.3.1 to 19.0.0

Release notes

Sourced from react-dom's releases.

19.0.0 (December 5, 2024)

Below is a list of all new features, APIs, deprecations, and breaking changes. Read React 19 release post and React 19 upgrade guide for more information.

Note: To help make the upgrade to React 19 easier, we’ve published a [email protected] release that is identical to 18.2 but adds warnings for deprecated APIs and other changes that are needed for React 19. We recommend upgrading to React 18.3.1 first to help identify any issues before upgrading to React 19.

New Features

React

  • Actions: startTransition can now accept async functions. Functions passed to startTransition are called “Actions”. A given Transition can include one or more Actions which update state in the background and update the UI with one commit. In addition to updating state, Actions can now perform side effects including async requests, and the Action will wait for the work to finish before finishing the Transition. This feature allows Transitions to include side effects like fetch() in the pending state, and provides support for error handling, and optimistic updates.
  • useActionState: is a new hook to order Actions inside of a Transition with access to the state of the action, and the pending state. It accepts a reducer that can call Actions, and the initial state used for first render. It also accepts an optional string that is used if the action is passed to a form action prop to support progressive enhancement in forms.
  • useOptimistic: is a new hook to update state while a Transition is in progress. It returns the state, and a set function that can be called inside a transition to “optimistically” update the state to expected final value immediately while the Transition completes in the background. When the transition finishes, the state is updated to the new value.
  • use: is a new API that allows reading resources in render. In React 19, use accepts a promise or Context. If provided a promise, use will suspend until a value is resolved. use can only be used in render but can be called conditionally.
  • ref as a prop: Refs can now be used as props, removing the need for forwardRef.
  • Suspense sibling pre-warming: When a component suspends, React will immediately commit the fallback of the nearest Suspense boundary, without waiting for the entire sibling tree to render. After the fallback commits, React will schedule another render for the suspended siblings to “pre-warm” lazy requests.

React DOM Client

  • <form> action prop: Form Actions allow you to manage forms automatically and integrate with useFormStatus. When a <form> action succeeds, React will automatically reset the form for uncontrolled components. The form can be reset manually with the new requestFormReset API.
  • <button> and <input> formAction prop: Actions can be passed to the formAction prop to configure form submission behavior. This allows using different Actions depending on the input.
  • useFormStatus: is a new hook that provides the status of the parent <form> action, as if the form was a Context provider. The hook returns the values: pending, data, method, and action.
  • Support for Document Metadata: We’ve added support for rendering document metadata tags in components natively. React will automatically hoist them into the <head> section of the document.
  • Support for Stylesheets: React 19 will ensure stylesheets are inserted into the <head> on the client before revealing the content of a Suspense boundary that depends on that stylesheet.
  • Support for async scripts: Async scripts can be rendered anywhere in the component tree and React will handle ordering and deduplication.
  • Support for preloading resources: React 19 ships with preinit, preload, prefetchDNS, and preconnect APIs to optimize initial page loads by moving discovery of additional resources like fonts out of stylesheet loading. They can also be used to prefetch resources used by an anticipated navigation.

React DOM Server

  • Added prerender and prerenderToNodeStream APIs for static site generation. They are designed to work with streaming environments like Node.js Streams and Web Streams. Unlike renderToString, they wait for data to load for HTML generation.

React Server Components

  • RSC features such as directives, server components, and server functions are now stable. This means libraries that ship with Server Components can now target React 19 as a peer dependency with a react-server export condition for use in frameworks that support the Full-stack React Architecture. The underlying APIs used to implement a React Server Components bundler or framework do not follow semver and may break between minors in React 19.x. See docs for how to support React Server Components.

Deprecations

  • Deprecated: element.ref access: React 19 supports ref as a prop, so we’re deprecating element.ref in favor of element.props.ref. Accessing will result in a warning.
  • react-test-renderer: In React 19, react-test-renderer logs a deprecation warning and has switched to concurrent rendering for web usage. We recommend migrating your tests to @​testinglibrary.com/docs/react-testing-library/intro/) or @​testingesting-library.com/docs/react-native-testing-library/intro)

Breaking Changes

React 19 brings in a number of breaking changes, including the removals of long-deprecated APIs. We recommend first upgrading to 18.3.1, where we've added additional deprecation warnings. Check out the upgrade guide for more details and guidance on codemodding.

React

  • New JSX Transform is now required: We introduced a new JSX transform in 2020 to improve bundle size and use JSX without importing React. In React 19, we’re adding additional improvements like using ref as a prop and JSX speed improvements that require the new transform.
  • Errors in render are not re-thrown: Errors that are not caught by an Error Boundary are now reported to window.reportError. Errors that are caught by an Error Boundary are reported to console.error. We’ve introduced onUncaughtError and onCaughtError methods to createRoot and hydrateRoot to customize this error handling.
  • Removed: propTypes: Using propTypes will now be silently ignored. If required, we recommend migrating to TypeScript or another type-checking solution.
  • Removed: defaultProps for functions: ES6 default parameters can be used in place. Class components continue to support defaultProps since there is no ES6 alternative.
  • Removed: contextTypes and getChildContext: Legacy Context for class components has been removed in favor of the contextType API.

... (truncated)

Changelog

Sourced from react-dom's changelog.

19.0.0 (December 5, 2024)

Below is a list of all new features, APIs, deprecations, and breaking changes. Read React 19 release post and React 19 upgrade guide for more information.

Note: To help make the upgrade to React 19 easier, we’ve published a [email protected] release that is identical to 18.2 but adds warnings for deprecated APIs and other changes that are needed for React 19. We recommend upgrading to React 18.3.1 first to help identify any issues before upgrading to React 19.

New Features

React

  • Actions: startTransition can now accept async functions. Functions passed to startTransition are called “Actions”. A given Transition can include one or more Actions which update state in the background and update the UI with one commit. In addition to updating state, Actions can now perform side effects including async requests, and the Action will wait for the work to finish before finishing the Transition. This feature allows Transitions to include side effects like fetch() in the pending state, and provides support for error handling, and optimistic updates.
  • useActionState: is a new hook to order Actions inside of a Transition with access to the state of the action, and the pending state. It accepts a reducer that can call Actions, and the initial state used for first render. It also accepts an optional string that is used if the action is passed to a form action prop to support progressive enhancement in forms.
  • useOptimistic: is a new hook to update state while a Transition is in progress. It returns the state, and a set function that can be called inside a transition to “optimistically” update the state to expected final value immediately while the Transition completes in the background. When the transition finishes, the state is updated to the new value.
  • use: is a new API that allows reading resources in render. In React 19, use accepts a promise or Context. If provided a promise, use will suspend until a value is resolved. use can only be used in render but can be called conditionally.
  • ref as a prop: Refs can now be used as props, removing the need for forwardRef.
  • Suspense sibling pre-warming: When a component suspends, React will immediately commit the fallback of the nearest Suspense boundary, without waiting for the entire sibling tree to render. After the fallback commits, React will schedule another render for the suspended siblings to “pre-warm” lazy requests.

React DOM Client

  • <form> action prop: Form Actions allow you to manage forms automatically and integrate with useFormStatus. When a <form> action succeeds, React will automatically reset the form for uncontrolled components. The form can be reset manually with the new requestFormReset API.
  • <button> and <input> formAction prop: Actions can be passed to the formAction prop to configure form submission behavior. This allows using different Actions depending on the input.
  • useFormStatus: is a new hook that provides the status of the parent <form> action, as if the form was a Context provider. The hook returns the values: pending, data, method, and action.
  • Support for Document Metadata: We’ve added support for rendering document metadata tags in components natively. React will automatically hoist them into the <head> section of the document.
  • Support for Stylesheets: React 19 will ensure stylesheets are inserted into the <head> on the client before revealing the content of a Suspense boundary that depends on that stylesheet.
  • Support for async scripts: Async scripts can be rendered anywhere in the component tree and React will handle ordering and deduplication.
  • Support for preloading resources: React 19 ships with preinit, preload, prefetchDNS, and preconnect APIs to optimize initial page loads by moving discovery of additional resources like fonts out of stylesheet loading. They can also be used to prefetch resources used by an anticipated navigation.

React DOM Server

  • Added prerender and prerenderToNodeStream APIs for static site generation. They are designed to work with streaming environments like Node.js Streams and Web Streams. Unlike renderToString, they wait for data to load for HTML generation.

React Server Components

  • RSC features such as directives, server components, and server functions are now stable. This means libraries that ship with Server Components can now target React 19 as a peer dependency with a react-server export condition for use in frameworks that support the Full-stack React Architecture. The underlying APIs used to implement a React Server Components bundler or framework do not follow semver and may break between minors in React 19.x. See docs for how to support React Server Components.

Deprecations

  • Deprecated: element.ref access: React 19 supports ref as a prop, so we’re deprecating element.ref in favor of element.props.ref. Accessing will result in a warning.
  • react-test-renderer: In React 19, react-test-renderer logs a deprecation warning and has switched to concurrent rendering for web usage. We recommend migrating your tests to @​testing-library/react or @​testing-library/react-native

Breaking Changes

React 19 brings in a number of breaking changes, including the removals of long-deprecated APIs. We recommend first upgrading to 18.3.1, where we've added additional deprecation warnings. Check out the upgrade guide for more details and guidance on codemodding.

React

  • New JSX Transform is now required: We introduced a new JSX transform in 2020 to improve bundle size and use JSX without importing React. In React 19, we’re adding additional improvements like using ref as a prop and JSX speed improvements that require the new transform.
  • Errors in render are not re-thrown: Errors that are not caught by an Error Boundary are now reported to window.reportError. Errors that are caught by an Error Boundary are reported to console.error. We’ve introduced onUncaughtError and onCaughtError methods to createRoot and hydrateRoot to customize this error handling.
  • Removed: propTypes: Using propTypes will now be silently ignored. If required, we recommend migrating to TypeScript or another type-checking solution.
  • Removed: defaultProps for functions: ES6 default parameters can be used in place. Class components continue to support defaultProps since there is no ES6 alternative.

... (truncated)

Commits

Updates @types/react-dom from 18.3.0 to 19.0.4

Commits

Updates react-redux from 9.1.2 to 9.2.0

Release notes

Sourced from react-redux's releases.

v9.2.0

This feature release updates the React peer dependency to work with React 19, and improves treeshakeability of our build artifacts.

Changelog

React 19 Compat

React 19 was just released! We've updated our peer dep to accept React 19, and updated our runtime and type tests to check against both React 18 and 19.

Also see Redux Toolkit v2.5.0 for the same peer dep update.

Treeshaking

We've done some nitty-gritty optimization work to ensure bundlers correctly treeshake unused parts of the bundle.

What's Changed

Full Changelog: reduxjs/react-redux@v9.1.2...v9.2.0

Commits
  • 7e2fdd4 Release 9.2.0
  • 8c57382 Merge pull request #2217 from reduxjs/feature/react-19-devdep-cleanup
  • d23509b Exclude stray dist folders and website from tsconfig
  • b275a32 Eliminate other stray React import
  • 3ba9838 Drop unused Babel devdeps
  • 1a81c41 Merge pull request #2216 from reduxjs/migrate-to-react-19
  • c58e397 Migrate to React 19
  • e08518a Fix act related issues in test/hooks/useSelector.spec.tsx
  • 1cd1385 Update hoist-non-react-statics implementation
  • a1fc886 Fix type of innerMapStateToProps in Provider.spec.tsx
  • Additional commits viewable in compare view

Updates @types/react from 18.3.5 to 19.0.10

Commits

Updates @types/react-dom from 18.3.0 to 19.0.4

Commits

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Bumps the react group with 6 updates in the /web directory:

| Package | From | To |
| --- | --- | --- |
| [@reduxjs/toolkit](https://github.com/reduxjs/redux-toolkit) | `2.2.7` | `2.6.0` |
| [react](https://github.com/facebook/react/tree/HEAD/packages/react) | `18.3.1` | `19.0.0` |
| [@types/react](https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/tree/HEAD/types/react) | `18.3.5` | `19.0.10` |
| [react-dom](https://github.com/facebook/react/tree/HEAD/packages/react-dom) | `18.3.1` | `19.0.0` |
| [@types/react-dom](https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/tree/HEAD/types/react-dom) | `18.3.0` | `19.0.4` |
| [react-redux](https://github.com/reduxjs/react-redux) | `9.1.2` | `9.2.0` |



Updates `@reduxjs/toolkit` from 2.2.7 to 2.6.0
- [Release notes](https://github.com/reduxjs/redux-toolkit/releases)
- [Commits](reduxjs/redux-toolkit@v2.2.7...v2.6.0)

Updates `react` from 18.3.1 to 19.0.0
- [Release notes](https://github.com/facebook/react/releases)
- [Changelog](https://github.com/facebook/react/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md)
- [Commits](https://github.com/facebook/react/commits/v19.0.0/packages/react)

Updates `@types/react` from 18.3.5 to 19.0.10
- [Release notes](https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/releases)
- [Commits](https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/commits/HEAD/types/react)

Updates `react-dom` from 18.3.1 to 19.0.0
- [Release notes](https://github.com/facebook/react/releases)
- [Changelog](https://github.com/facebook/react/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md)
- [Commits](https://github.com/facebook/react/commits/v19.0.0/packages/react-dom)

Updates `@types/react-dom` from 18.3.0 to 19.0.4
- [Release notes](https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/releases)
- [Commits](https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/commits/HEAD/types/react-dom)

Updates `react-redux` from 9.1.2 to 9.2.0
- [Release notes](https://github.com/reduxjs/react-redux/releases)
- [Changelog](https://github.com/reduxjs/react-redux/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md)
- [Commits](reduxjs/react-redux@v9.1.2...v9.2.0)

Updates `@types/react` from 18.3.5 to 19.0.10
- [Release notes](https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/releases)
- [Commits](https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/commits/HEAD/types/react)

Updates `@types/react-dom` from 18.3.0 to 19.0.4
- [Release notes](https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/releases)
- [Commits](https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/commits/HEAD/types/react-dom)

---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: "@reduxjs/toolkit"
  dependency-type: direct:production
  update-type: version-update:semver-minor
  dependency-group: react
- dependency-name: react
  dependency-type: direct:production
  update-type: version-update:semver-major
  dependency-group: react
- dependency-name: "@types/react"
  dependency-type: direct:development
  update-type: version-update:semver-major
  dependency-group: react
- dependency-name: react-dom
  dependency-type: direct:production
  update-type: version-update:semver-major
  dependency-group: react
- dependency-name: "@types/react-dom"
  dependency-type: direct:development
  update-type: version-update:semver-major
  dependency-group: react
- dependency-name: react-redux
  dependency-type: direct:production
  update-type: version-update:semver-minor
  dependency-group: react
- dependency-name: "@types/react"
  dependency-type: direct:development
  update-type: version-update:semver-major
  dependency-group: react
- dependency-name: "@types/react-dom"
  dependency-type: direct:development
  update-type: version-update:semver-major
  dependency-group: react
...

Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <[email protected]>
@dependabot dependabot bot added dependencies Pull requests that update a dependency file javascript Pull requests that update Javascript code labels Feb 24, 2025
@dependabot dependabot bot requested a review from jeubank12 February 24, 2025 08:17
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dependabot bot commented on behalf of github Mar 10, 2025

Superseded by #1558.

@dependabot dependabot bot closed this Mar 10, 2025
@dependabot dependabot bot deleted the dependabot/npm_and_yarn/web/react-5189d1cc9c branch March 10, 2025 07:33
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