Book Image

React Components

By : Christopher Pitt
Book Image

React Components

By: Christopher 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 (17 chapters)
React Components
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Communicating through Ajax requests


Ajax is a loaded word. For the purposes of this chapter, I want you to think of it only as a means to fetch data from a server and send data to it using HTTP requests.

We've just seen how we can respond to HTTP requests, so we're half-way there! At this point, we can inspect requests to determine the URL and method of each HTTP request. A browser may be requesting something like GET http://127.0.0.1:3000/pages to get all the pages. So, if the method matches POST and the path matches /pages, then we can respond with the appropriate pages.

Luckily for us, others have been down this path before. Projects such as ExpressJS have sprung up to provide some scaffolding for us. Let's install ExpressJS:

$ npm install --save express

Now, we can convert our simple HTTP server to be based on ExpressJS:

var app = require("express")();
var server = require("http").Server(app);

app.get("/", function (request, response) {
    response.send(
        require("./hello-world...