- Adds React 18 and 19 migration orchestration plugins - Introduces comprehensive upgrade toolkits for migrating legacy React 16/17 and 18 codebases to React 18.3.1 and 19, respectively. Each plugin bundles specialized agents and skills for exhaustive audit, dependency management, class/component API migration, test suite transformation, and batching regression fixes. - The React 18 toolkit targets class-component-heavy apps, ensures safe lifecycle and context transitions, resolves dependency blockers, and fully automates test migrations including Enzyme removal. The React 19 toolkit addresses breaking changes such as removal of legacy APIs, defaultProps on function components, and forwardRef, while enforcing a gated, memory-resumable migration pipeline. - Both plugins update documentation, plugin registries, and skill references to support reliable, repeatable enterprise-scale React migrations.
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name, description
| name | description |
|---|---|
| react19-concurrent-patterns | Preserve React 18 concurrent patterns and adopt React 19 APIs (useTransition, useDeferredValue, Suspense, use(), useOptimistic, Actions) during migration. |
React 19 Concurrent Patterns
React 19 introduced new APIs that complement the migration work. This skill covers two concerns:
- Preserve existing React 18 concurrent patterns that must not be broken during migration
- Adopt new React 19 APIs worth introducing after migration stabilizes
Part 1 Preserve: React 18 Concurrent Patterns That Must Survive the Migration
These patterns exist in React 18 codebases and must not be accidentally removed or broken:
createRoot Already Migrated by the R18 Orchestra
If the R18 orchestra already ran, ReactDOM.render → createRoot is done. Verify it's correct:
// CORRECT React 19 root (same as React 18):
import { createRoot } from 'react-dom/client';
const root = createRoot(document.getElementById('root'));
root.render(
<React.StrictMode>
<App />
</React.StrictMode>
);
useTransition No Migration Needed
useTransition from React 18 works identically in React 19. Do not touch these patterns during migration:
// React 18 useTransition unchanged in React 19:
const [isPending, startTransition] = useTransition();
function handleClick() {
startTransition(() => {
setFilteredResults(computeExpensiveFilter(input));
});
}
useDeferredValue No Migration Needed
// React 18 useDeferredValue unchanged in React 19:
const deferredQuery = useDeferredValue(query);
Suspense for Code Splitting No Migration Needed
// React 18 Suspense with lazy unchanged in React 19:
const LazyComponent = React.lazy(() => import('./LazyComponent'));
function App() {
return (
<Suspense fallback={<Spinner />}>
<LazyComponent />
</Suspense>
);
}
Part 2 React 19 New APIs
These are worth adopting in a post-migration cleanup sprint. Do not introduce these DURING the migration stabilize first.
For full patterns on each new API, read:
references/react19-use.mdtheuse()hook for promises and contextreferences/react19-actions.mdActions, useActionState, useFormStatus, useOptimisticreferences/react19-suspense.mdSuspense for data fetching (the new pattern)
Migration Safety Rules
During the React 19 migration itself, these concurrent-mode patterns must be left completely untouched:
# Verify nothing touched these during migration:
grep -rn "useTransition\|useDeferredValue\|Suspense\|startTransition" \
src/ --include="*.js" --include="*.jsx" | grep -v "\.test\."
If the migrator touched any of these files, review the changes the migration should only have modified React API surface (forwardRef, defaultProps, etc.), never concurrent mode logic.