Book Image

ReactJS by Example - Building Modern Web Applications with React

By : Vipul A M
Book Image

ReactJS by Example - Building Modern Web Applications with React

By: Vipul A M

Overview of this book

ReactJS is an open-source JavaScript library that brings the power of reactive programming to web applications and sites. It aims to address the challenges encountered in developing single-page applications, and is intended to help developers build large, easily scalable and changing web apps. Starting with a project on Open Library API, you will be introduced to React and JSX before moving on to learning about the life cycle of a React component. In the second project, building a multi-step wizard form, you will learn about composite dynamic components and perform DOM actions. You will also learn about building a fast search engine by exploring server-side rendering in the third project on a search engine application. Next, you will build a simple frontpage for an e-commerce app in the fourth project by using data models and React add-ons. In the final project you will develop a complete social media tracker by using the flux way of defining React apps and know about the best practices and use cases with the help of ES6 and redux. By the end of this book, you will not only have a good understanding of ReactJS but will also have built your very own responsive frontend applications from scratch.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
ReactJS by Example - Building Modern Web Applications with React
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Immutable data


"Mike, I have a question though. All said and done, why does PureRenderMixin perform shallow comparison in the first place? Should it not perform a deep comparison so that we will always have better performance?" Shawn was not very happy with PureRenderMixin.

"Well, there is a reason for this. Shallow comparison is very cheap. It does not take much time. Deep comparison is always expensive. Therefore, PureRenderMixin does shallow comparison, which is good enough for most of the simple use cases," said Mike.

"However, React does provide us an option of defining our own version of shouldComponentUpdate as we saw earlier. We can completely short-circuit the re-rendering process by just returning false from shouldComponentUpdate or we can compare only those props that are required by our component."

"True, just like we had written shouldComponentUpdate for the BookRow component right?" asked Shawn.

// src/BookRow.js

export default React.createClass({
  shouldComponentUpdate(nextProps...