Book Image

Hands-On Full Stack Development with Spring Boot 2 and React - Second Edition

By : Juha Hinkula
Book Image

Hands-On Full Stack Development with Spring Boot 2 and React - Second Edition

By: Juha Hinkula

Overview of this book

React Hooks have changed the way React components are coded. They enable you to write components in a more intuitive way without using classes, which makes your code easier to read and maintain. Building on from the previous edition, this book is updated with React Hooks and the latest changes introduced in create-react-app and Spring Boot 2.1. This book starts with a brief introduction to Spring Boot. You’ll understand how to use dependency injection and work with the data access layer of Spring using Hibernate as the ORM tool. You’ll then learn how to build your own RESTful API endpoints for web applications. As you advance, the book introduces you to other Spring components, such as Spring Security to help you secure the backend. Moving on, you’ll explore React and its app development environment and components for building your frontend. Finally, you’ll create a Docker container for your application by implementing the best practices that underpin professional full stack web development. By the end of this book, you’ll be equipped with all the knowledge you need to build modern full stack applications with Spring Boot for the backend and React for the frontend.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Backend Programming with Spring Boot
7
Section 2: Frontend Programming with React
12
Section 3: Full Stack Development

JSX and styling

JSX is the syntax extension for JavaScript. It is not mandatory to use JSX with React, but there are some benefits that make development easier. JSX, for example, prevents injection attacks because all values are escaped in the JSX before they are rendered. The most useful feature is that you can embed JavaScript expressions in the JSX by wrapping it with curly brackets; this technique will be used a lot in the following chapters. In the following example, we can access the component props when using JSX. The component props are covered in the next section:

class Hello extends React.Component {
render() {
return <h1>Hello World {this.props.user}</h1>;
}
}

You can also pass a JavaScript expression as props, as shown in the following code:

<Hello count={2+2} />

JSX is compiled to the React.createElement() calls by Babel. You can use both internal...