Sign In Start Free Trial
Account

Add to playlist

Create a Playlist

Modal Close icon
You need to login to use this feature.
  • Book Overview & Buying React Components
  • Table Of Contents Toc
React Components

React Components

By : Pitt
close
close
React Components

React Components

By: Pitt

Overview of this book

The reader will learn how to use React and its component-based architecture in order to develop modern user interfaces. A new holistic way of thinking about UI development will establish throughout this book and the reader will discover the power of React components with many examples. After reading the book and following the example application, the reader has built a small to a mid-size application with React using a component based UI architecture. The book will take the reader through a journey to discover the benefits of component-based user interfaces over the classical MVC architecture. Throughout the book, the reader will develop a wide range of components and then bring them together to build a component-based UI. By the end of this book, readers would have learned several techniques to build powerful components and how the component-based development is beneficial over regular web development.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
close
close
11
Index

Using modern JavaScript

React components are wonderfully encapsulated. Each component is a blueprint for what a focused bit of markup should look like at any moment. They're reusable and can change their behavior depending on the context provided. Does that remind you of another programming paradigm?

Let's talk about JavaScript. JavaScript has a prototypical inheritance model. That means different objects can have a common structure. The structure of one object can be derived from the structure of another.

It also means that changes to the original object are inherited in all derivative objects. Let me illustrate this with some code:

var Page = function(content) {
    this.content = content;
};

Page.prototype.render = function() {
    return "<div>" + this.content + "</div>";
}

var Post = function(tags, content) {
    this.tags = tags;

    Page.call(this, content);
};

Post.prototype = new Page();

Post.prototype.render = function() {
    var page = Page.prototype.render.call(this);

    return "<ul>" + this.renderTags() + "</ul>" + page;
};

Post.prototype.renderTags = function() {
    return "<li>" + this.tags.join("</li></li>") + "</li>";
};

var page = new Page("Welcome to my site!");
var post = new Post(["news"], "A new product!");

Page.prototype.render = function() {
    return "<section>" + this.content + "</section>";
};

I begin by creating a function called Page, which requires a content parameter. A simple render method returns that content, wrapped in a div tag. This seems like a good starting point for a website.

Next, I decide to make a second type called Post. Objects of this type have tags, so I create a new initialization function to store them. I want Post to behave almost like a Page type, so I call the Page initialization function.

To inherit the Page methods in Post, I need to link their prototypes. I can then choose to override the render method and add new methods to the derived type. I can also change the Page type and these changes will be inherited by objects of the Post type. The connection happens because a prototype is a reference and not a copy.

Depending on the programming languages you grew up with, prototypical inheritance might be tricky at first. Many new developers learn (incorrectly) that object-oriented code means class-oriented code. Dynamic concepts such as prototypes are foreign to them. In the past, this led to a few libraries implementing "pretend" classes. They created patterns that would make code appear as if it was class-oriented.

Then, ES6 added the class keyword. It's a formalization of the pattern I just showed you. It's a syntactic shortcut to prototypical inheritance.

We could reduce the previous code to:

class Page {
    constructor(content) {
        this.content = content;
    }

    render() {
        return "<div>" + this.content + "</div>";
    }
}

class Post extends Page {
    constructor(tags, content) {
        super(content);
        this.tags = tags;
    }

    render() {
        var page = super.render();
        
        return "<ul>" + this.renderTags() + "</ul>" + page;
    }

    renderTags() {
        return "<li>" + this.tags.join("</li></li>") + "</li>";
    }
}

var page = new Page("Welcome to my site!");
var post = new Post(["news"], "A new product!");

Note

If you're trying to run this using Node (preferably a version greater than 4.1), you may need to add use strict at the top of the file.

Notice how much clearer things are? If you want to use classes, then this syntactic shortcut is brilliant!

Let's look at a typical ES5-compatible React component:

var Page = React.createClass({
    render: function() {
        return <div>{this.props.content}</div>;
    }
});

var Post = React.createClass({
    render: function() {
        var page = <Page content={this.props.content} />
        var tags = this.renderTags();

        return <div><ul>{tags}</ul>{page}</div>;
    },
    renderTags: function() {
        return this.props.tags.map(function(tag, i) {
            return <li key={i}>{tag}</li>;
        });
    }
});

ReactDOM.render(
    <Post tags={["news"]} content="A new product!" />,
    document.querySelector(".react")
);

You've probably seen this kind of code before. It's called JSX and it's a JavaScript superset language. The idea is that the markup and the supporting logic are created and stored together.

Note

React components must return a single React node, which is why we wrap the tags and page elements in a div element. If you are using React in the browser, you also need to render your components to an existing DOM node (like I've just rendered the post to .react).

We'll get into some of the specifics in later chapters, but this is doing pretty much the same thing as before. We create a base component called Page. It renders a property instead of a constructor parameter.

The Post component composes the Page component. This style of React code doesn't support component inheritance. For that, we need ES6 code:

class Page extends React.Component {
    render() {
        return <div>{this.props.content}</div>;
    }
}

class Post extends Page {
    render() {
        var page = super.render();
        var tags = this.renderTags();

        return <div><ul>{tags}</ul>{page}</div>;
    }

    renderTags() {
        return this.props.tags.map(function(tag, i) {
            return <li key={i}>{tag}</li>;
        });
    }
}

We could still compose Page within Post, but that's not the only option with ES6. This code resembles the non-React version we saw earlier.

In upcoming chapters, we'll learn many useful features of ES6 that'll allow us to create modern, expressive React components.

Note

If you want to look ahead a little, check out http://babeljs.io/docs/learn-es2015. It's a great place to learn the main features of ES6!

Babel is the cross-compilation tool we'll use to turn ES6 code into ES5 code:

Using modern JavaScript
Visually different images
CONTINUE READING
83
Tech Concepts
36
Programming languages
73
Tech Tools
Icon Unlimited access to the largest independent learning library in tech of over 8,000 expert-authored tech books and videos.
Icon Innovative learning tools, including AI book assistants, code context explainers, and text-to-speech.
Icon 50+ new titles added per month and exclusive early access to books as they are being written.
React Components
notes
bookmark Notes and Bookmarks search Search in title playlist Add to playlist font-size Font size

Change the font size

margin-width Margin width

Change margin width

day-mode Day/Sepia/Night Modes

Change background colour

Close icon Search
Country selected

Close icon Your notes and bookmarks

Confirmation

Modal Close icon
claim successful

Buy this book with your credits?

Modal Close icon
Are you sure you want to buy this book with one of your credits?
Close
YES, BUY

Submit Your Feedback

Modal Close icon
Modal Close icon
Modal Close icon