Book Image

Learn React with TypeScript - Second Edition

By : Carl Rippon
4.4 (8)
Book Image

Learn React with TypeScript - Second Edition

4.4 (8)
By: Carl Rippon

Overview of this book

Reading, navigating, and debugging a large frontend codebase is a major issue faced by frontend developers. This book is designed to help web developers like you learn about ReactJS and TypeScript, both of which power large-scale apps for many organizations. This second edition of Learn React with TypeScript is updated, enhanced, and improved to cover new features of React 18 including hooks, state management libraries, and features of TypeScript 4. The book will enable you to create well-structured and reusable React components that are easy to read and maintain, leveraging modern design patterns. You’ll be able to ensure that all your components are type-safe, making the most of TypeScript features, including some advanced types. You’ll also learn how to manage complex states using Redux and how to interact with a GraphQL web API. Finally, you’ll discover how to write robust unit tests for React components using Jest. By the end of the book, you’ll be well-equipped to use both React and TypeScript.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Part 1: Introduction
6
Part 2: App Fundamentals
10
Part 3: Data
14
Part 4: Advanced React

Answers

  1. createContext must be passed a default value when using it with TypeScript. Here’s the corrected code:
    const ThemeContext = createContext<ThemeContextType>({
      name: 'standard',
      color: 'light',
      changeTheme: (name: string, color: 'dark' | 'light') => {},
    });
  2. Footer must be placed inside ThemeProvider as follows:
    <ThemeProvider>
      <Header />
      <Main />
      <Footer />
    </ThemeProvider>
  3. Yes, there is no limit on the number of React contexts in an app.
  4. No, only a single Redux store can be added to an app.
  5. useDispatch can’t be used directly to dispatch an action – it returns a function that can be used to dispatch an action:
    const dispatch = useDispatch();
    function handleChangeTheme({ name, color }: Theme) {
      dispatch(changeThemeAction(name, color));
    }
  6. Yes, local state defined using useState or useReducer...