Book Image

The React Workshop

By : Brandon Richey, Ryan Yu, Endre Vegh, Theofanis Despoudis, Anton Punith, Florian Sloot
5 (1)
Book Image

The React Workshop

5 (1)
By: Brandon Richey, Ryan Yu, Endre Vegh, Theofanis Despoudis, Anton Punith, Florian Sloot

Overview of this book

Are you interested in how React takes command of the view layer for web and mobile apps and changes the data of large web applications without needing to reload the page? This workshop will help you learn how and show you how to develop and enhance web apps using the features of the React framework with interesting examples and exercises. The workshop starts by demonstrating how to create your first React project. You’ll tap into React’s popular feature JSX to develop templates and use DOM events to make your project interactive. Next, you’ll focus on the lifecycle of the React component and understand how components are created, mounted, unmounted, and destroyed. Later, you’ll create and customize components to understand the data flow in React and how props and state communicate between components. You’ll also use Formik to create forms in React to explore the concept of controlled and uncontrolled components and even play with React Router to navigate between React components. The chapters that follow will help you build an interesting image-search app to fetch data from the outside world and populate the data to the React app. Finally, you’ll understand what ref API is and how it is used to manipulate DOM in an imperative way. By the end of this React book, you’ll have the skills you need to set up and create web apps using React.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Preface

Nested Conditional Rendering

We have implemented our first example of a dynamic app with conditional rendering, but there is a lot more we can do. In the preceding exercise, we just have a single state and a single portion of the code that is conditionally rendered, but what if we wanted to expand that further or have even more complex application states that we want to be represented in the UI?

Conditional rendering is very useful because we can actually use it at multiple nesting levels to have an app structure that is entirely dynamic.

In the next exercise, we are going to build out a quiz app where different questions will appear depending on your answers. We will be recording the state and modifying it as the user answers each question along the way.

Exercise 3.02: Building a Conditional Quiz App

Now we need to think about how we want to build up this quiz app for the user. We will display each question and the choices for each; when the correct answer is chosen...