A JavaScript error in a part of the UI shouldn’t break the whole app. To solve this problem for React users, React 16 introduces a new concept of an “error boundary”.
Error boundaries are React components that
catch JavaScript errors anywhere in their child component tree, log those errors, and display a fallback UI
instead of the component tree that crashed. Error boundaries catch errors during rendering, in lifecycle methods, and in constructors of the whole tree below them.
Note
Error boundaries do
not
catch errors for:
Event handlers (learn more)
Asynchronous code (e.g.
setTimeout
or
requestAnimationFrame
callbacks)
Server side rendering
Errors thrown in the error boundary itself (rather than its children)
A class component becomes an error boundary if it defines either (or both) of the lifecycle methods
static getDerivedStateFromError()
or
componentDidCatch()
. Use
static getDerivedStateFromError()
to render a fallback UI after an error has been thrown. Use
componentDidCatch()
to log error information.
staticgetDerivedStateFromError(error){// Update state so the next render will show the fallback UI.return{hasError:true};} componentDidCatch(error, errorInfo){// You can also log the error to an error reporting servicelogErrorToMyService(error, errorInfo);} render(){ if(this.state.hasError){// You can render any custom fallback UIreturn<h1>Something went wrong.</h1>;} returnthis.props.children; } }
Then you can use it as a regular component:
<ErrorBoundary> <MyWidget/> </ErrorBoundary>
Error boundaries work like a JavaScript
catch {}
block, but for components. Only class components can be error boundaries. In practice, most of the time you’ll want to declare an error boundary component once and use it throughout your application.
Note that
error boundaries only catch errors in the components below them in the tree
. An error boundary can’t catch an error within itself. If an error boundary fails trying to render the error message, the error will propagate to the closest error boundary above it. This, too, is similar to how the
catch {}
block works in JavaScript.
Live Demo
Check out this example of declaring and using an error boundary.
Where to Place Error Boundaries
The granularity of error boundaries is up to you. You may wrap top-level route components to display a “Something went wrong” message to the user, just like how server-side frameworks often handle crashes. You may also wrap individual widgets in an error boundary to protect them from crashing the rest of the application.
New Behavior for Uncaught Errors
This change has an important implication.
As of React 16, errors that were not caught by any error boundary will result in unmounting of the whole React component tree.
We debated this decision, but in our experience it is worse to leave corrupted UI in place than to completely remove it. For example, in a product like Messenger leaving the broken UI visible could lead to somebody sending a message to the wrong person. Similarly, it is worse for a payments app to display a wrong amount than to render nothing.
This change means that as you migrate to React 16, you will likely uncover existing crashes in your application that have been unnoticed before. Adding error boundaries lets you provide better user experience when something goes wrong.
For example, Facebook Messenger wraps content of the sidebar, the info panel, the conversation log, and the message input into separate error boundaries. If some component in one of these UI areas crashes, the rest of them remain interactive.
We also encourage you to use JS error reporting services (or build your own) so that you can learn about unhandled exceptions as they happen in production, and fix them.
Component Stack Traces
React 16 prints all errors that occurred during rendering to the console in development, even if the application accidentally swallows them. In addition to the error message and the JavaScript stack, it also provides component stack traces. Now you can see where exactly in the component tree the failure has happened:
You can also see the filenames and line numbers in the component stack trace. This works by default in Create React App projects:
If you don’t use Create React App, you can add this plugin manually to your Babel configuration. Note that it’s intended only for development and
must be disabled in production
.
Note
Component names displayed in the stack traces depend on the
Function.name
property. If you support older browsers and devices which may not yet provide this natively (e.g. IE 11), consider including a
Function.name
polyfill in your bundled application, such as
function.name-polyfill
. Alternatively, you may explicitly set the
displayName
property on all your components.
How About try/catch?
try
/
catch
is great but it only works for imperative code:
try{ showButton(); }catch(error){ // ... }
However, React components are declarative and specify
what
should be rendered:
<Button/>
Error boundaries preserve the declarative nature of React, and behave as you would expect. For example, even if an error occurs in a
componentDidUpdate
method caused by a
setState
somewhere deep in the tree, it will still correctly propagate to the closest error boundary.
How About Event Handlers?
Error boundaries
do not
catch errors inside event handlers.
React doesn’t need error boundaries to recover from errors in event handlers. Unlike the render method and lifecycle methods, the event handlers don’t happen during rendering. So if they throw, React still knows what to display on the screen.
If you need to catch an error inside an event handler, use the regular JavaScript
try
/
catch
statement:
handleClick(){ try{// Do something that could throw}catch(error){this.setState({ error });}}
render(){ if(this.state.error){return<h1>Caught an error.</h1>}return<buttononClick={this.handleClick}>Click Me</button>} }
Note that the above example is demonstrating regular JavaScript behavior and doesn’t use error boundaries.
Naming Changes from React 15
React 15 included a very limited support for error boundaries under a different method name:
unstable_handleError
. This method no longer works, and you will need to change it to
componentDidCatch
in your code starting from the first 16 beta release.
For this change, we’ve provided a codemod to automatically migrate your code.
React components hide their implementation details, including their rendered output. Other components using
FancyButton
usually will not need to
obtain a ref to the inner
button
DOM element. This is good because it prevents components from relying on each other’s DOM structure too much.
Although such encapsulation is desirable for application-level components like
FeedStory
or
Comment
, it can be inconvenient for highly reusable “leaf” components like
FancyButton
or
MyTextInput
. These components tend to be used throughout the application in a similar manner as a regular DOM
button
and
input
, and accessing their DOM nodes may be unavoidable for managing focus, selection, or animations.
Ref forwarding is an opt-in feature that lets some components take a
ref
they receive, and pass it further down (in other words, “forward” it) to a child.
In the example below,
FancyButton
uses
React.forwardRef
to obtain the
ref
passed to it, and then forward it to the DOM
button
that it renders:
// You can now get a ref directly to the DOM button: const ref = React.createRef(); <FancyButtonref={ref}>Click me!</FancyButton>;
This way, components using
FancyButton
can get a ref to the underlying
button
DOM node and access it if necessary—just like if they used a DOM
button
directly.
Here is a step-by-step explanation of what happens in the above example:
We create a React ref by calling
React.createRef
and assign it to a
ref
variable.
We pass our
ref
down to
<FancyButton ref={ref}>
by specifying it as a JSX attribute.
React passes the
ref
to the
(props, ref) => ...
function inside
forwardRef
as a second argument.
We forward this
ref
argument down to
<button ref={ref}>
by specifying it as a JSX attribute.
When the ref is attached,
ref.current
will point to the
<button>
DOM node.
Note
The second
ref
argument only exists when you define a component with
React.forwardRef
call. Regular function or class components don’t receive the
ref
argument, and ref is not available in props either.
Ref forwarding is not limited to DOM components. You can forward refs to class component instances, too.
Note for component library maintainers
When you start using
forwardRef
in a component library, you should treat it as a breaking change and release a new major version of your library.
This is because your library likely has an observably different behavior (such as what refs get assigned to, and what types are exported), and this can break apps and other libraries that depend on the old behavior.
Conditionally applying
React.forwardRef
when it exists is also not recommended for the same reasons: it changes how your library behaves and can break your users’ apps when they upgrade React itself.
Forwarding refs in higher-order components
This technique can also be particularly useful with higher-order components (also known as HOCs). Let’s start with an example HOC that logs component props to the console:
The “logProps” HOC passes all
props
through to the component it wraps, so the rendered output will be the same. For example, we can use this HOC to log all props that get passed to our “fancy button” component:
// Rather than exporting FancyButton, we export LogProps. // It will render a FancyButton though. exportdefaultlogProps(FancyButton);
There is one caveat to the above example: refs will not get passed through. That’s because
ref
is not a prop. Like
key
, it’s handled differently by React. If you add a ref to a HOC, the ref will refer to the outermost container component, not the wrapped component.
This means that refs intended for our
FancyButton
component will actually be attached to the
LogProps
component:
import FancyButton from'./FancyButton';
const ref = React.createRef(); // The FancyButton component we imported is the LogProps HOC. // Even though the rendered output will be the same, // Our ref will point to LogProps instead of the inner FancyButton component! // This means we can't call e.g. ref.current.focus() <FancyButton label="Click Me" handleClick={handleClick} ref={ref}/>;
Fortunately, we can explicitly forward refs to the inner
FancyButton
component using the
React.forwardRef
API.
React.forwardRef
accepts a render function that receives
props
and
ref
parameters and returns a React node. For example:
render(){ const{forwardedRef,...rest}=this.props; // Assign the custom prop "forwardedRef" as a ref return<Componentref={forwardedRef}{...rest}/>;} }
// Note the second param "ref" provided by React.forwardRef. // We can pass it along to LogProps as a regular prop, e.g. "forwardedRef" // And it can then be attached to the Component. return React.forwardRef((props, ref)=>{return<LogProps{...props}forwardedRef={ref}/>;});}
Displaying a custom name in DevTools
React.forwardRef
accepts a render function. React DevTools uses this function to determine what to display for the ref forwarding component.
For example, the following component will appear as ”
ForwardRef
” in the DevTools:
// Give this component a more helpful display name in DevTools. // e.g. "ForwardRef(logProps(MyComponent))" const name = Component.displayName || Component.name; forwardRef.displayName =`logProps(${name})`; return React.forwardRef(forwardRef); }
A common pattern in React is for a component to return multiple elements. Fragments let you group a list of children without adding extra nodes to the DOM.
<Columns />
would need to return multiple
<td>
elements in order for the rendered HTML to be valid. If a parent div was used inside the
render()
of
<Columns />
, then the resulting HTML will be invalid.
You can use
<></>
the same way you’d use any other element except that it doesn’t support keys or attributes.
Keyed Fragments
Fragments declared with the explicit
<React.Fragment>
syntax may have keys. A use case for this is mapping a collection to an array of fragments — for example, to create a description list:
functionGlossary(props){ return( <dl> {props.items.map(item=>( // Without the `key`, React will fire a key warning <React.Fragmentkey={item.id}> <dt>{item.term}</dt> <dd>{item.description}</dd> </React.Fragment> ))} </dl> ); }
key
is the only attribute that can be passed to
Fragment
. In the future, we may add support for additional attributes, such as event handlers.
Live Demo
You can try out the new JSX fragment syntax with this CodePen.
A higher-order component (HOC) is an advanced technique in React for reusing component logic. HOCs are not part of the React API, per se. They are a pattern that emerges from React’s compositional nature.
Concretely,
a higher-order component is a function that takes a component and returns a new component.
In this document, we’ll discuss why higher-order components are useful, and how to write your own.
Use HOCs For Cross-Cutting Concerns
Note
We previously recommended mixins as a way to handle cross-cutting concerns. We’ve since realized that mixins create more trouble than they are worth. Read more about why we’ve moved away from mixins and how you can transition your existing components.
Components are the primary unit of code reuse in React. However, you’ll find that some patterns aren’t a straightforward fit for traditional components.
For example, say you have a
CommentList
component that subscribes to an external data source to render a list of comments:
classCommentListextendsReact.Component{ constructor(props){ super(props); this.handleChange =this.handleChange.bind(this); this.state ={ // "DataSource" is some global data source comments: DataSource.getComments() }; }
componentDidMount(){ // Subscribe to changes DataSource.addChangeListener(this.handleChange); }
componentWillUnmount(){ // Clean up listener DataSource.removeChangeListener(this.handleChange); }
handleChange(){ // Update component state whenever the data source changes this.setState({ comments: DataSource.getComments() }); }
CommentList
and
BlogPost
aren’t identical — they call different methods on
DataSource
, and they render different output. But much of their implementation is the same:
On mount, add a change listener to
DataSource
.
Inside the listener, call
setState
whenever the data source changes.
On unmount, remove the change listener.
You can imagine that in a large app, this same pattern of subscribing to
DataSource
and calling
setState
will occur over and over again. We want an abstraction that allows us to define this logic in a single place and share it across many components. This is where higher-order components excel.
We can write a function that creates components, like
CommentList
and
BlogPost
, that subscribe to
DataSource
. The function will accept as one of its arguments a child component that receives the subscribed data as a prop. Let’s call the function
withSubscription
:
The first parameter is the wrapped component. The second parameter retrieves the data we’re interested in, given a
DataSource
and the current props.
When
CommentListWithSubscription
and
BlogPostWithSubscription
are rendered,
CommentList
and
BlogPost
will be passed a
data
prop with the most current data retrieved from
DataSource
:
// This function takes a component... functionwithSubscription(WrappedComponent, selectData){ // ...and returns another component... returnclassextends React.Component { constructor(props){ super(props); this.handleChange =this.handleChange.bind(this); this.state ={ data:selectData(DataSource, props) }; }
componentDidMount(){ // ... that takes care of the subscription... DataSource.addChangeListener(this.handleChange); }
render(){ // ... and renders the wrapped component with the fresh data! // Notice that we pass through any additional props return<WrappedComponentdata={this.state.data}{...this.props}/>; } }; }
Note that a HOC doesn’t modify the input component, nor does it use inheritance to copy its behavior. Rather, a HOC
composes
the original component by
wrapping
it in a container component. A HOC is a pure function with zero side-effects.
And that’s it! The wrapped component receives all the props of the container, along with a new prop,
data
, which it uses to render its output. The HOC isn’t concerned with how or why the data is used, and the wrapped component isn’t concerned with where the data came from.
Because
withSubscription
is a normal function, you can add as many or as few arguments as you like. For example, you may want to make the name of the
data
prop configurable, to further isolate the HOC from the wrapped component. Or you could accept an argument that configures
shouldComponentUpdate
, or one that configures the data source. These are all possible because the HOC has full control over how the component is defined.
Like components, the contract between
withSubscription
and the wrapped component is entirely props-based. This makes it easy to swap one HOC for a different one, as long as they provide the same props to the wrapped component. This may be useful if you change data-fetching libraries, for example.
Don’t Mutate the Original Component. Use Composition.
Resist the temptation to modify a component’s prototype (or otherwise mutate it) inside a HOC.
functionlogProps(InputComponent){ InputComponent.prototype.componentDidUpdate=function(prevProps){ console.log('Current props: ',this.props); console.log('Previous props: ', prevProps); }; // The fact that we're returning the original input is a hint that it has // been mutated. return InputComponent; }
// EnhancedComponent will log whenever props are received const EnhancedComponent =logProps(InputComponent);
There are a few problems with this. One is that the input component cannot be reused separately from the enhanced component. More crucially, if you apply another HOC to
EnhancedComponent
that
also
mutates
componentDidUpdate
, the first HOC’s functionality will be overridden! This HOC also won’t work with function components, which do not have lifecycle methods.
Mutating HOCs are a leaky abstraction—the consumer must know how they are implemented in order to avoid conflicts with other HOCs.
Instead of mutation, HOCs should use composition, by wrapping the input component in a container component:
functionlogProps(WrappedComponent){ returnclassextends React.Component { componentDidUpdate(prevProps){ console.log('Current props: ',this.props); console.log('Previous props: ', prevProps); } render(){ // Wraps the input component in a container, without mutating it. Good! return<WrappedComponent{...this.props}/>; } } }
This HOC has the same functionality as the mutating version while avoiding the potential for clashes. It works equally well with class and function components. And because it’s a pure function, it’s composable with other HOCs, or even with itself.
You may have noticed similarities between HOCs and a pattern called
container components
. Container components are part of a strategy of separating responsibility between high-level and low-level concerns. Containers manage things like subscriptions and state, and pass props to components that handle things like rendering UI. HOCs use containers as part of their implementation. You can think of HOCs as parameterized container component definitions.
Convention: Pass Unrelated Props Through to the Wrapped Component
HOCs add features to a component. They shouldn’t drastically alter its contract. It’s expected that the component returned from a HOC has a similar interface to the wrapped component.
HOCs should pass through props that are unrelated to its specific concern. Most HOCs contain a render method that looks something like this:
render(){ // Filter out extra props that are specific to this HOC and shouldn't be // passed through const{ extraProp,...passThroughProps }=this.props;
// Inject props into the wrapped component. These are usually state values or // instance methods. const injectedProp = someStateOrInstanceMethod;
What?!
If you break it apart, it’s easier to see what’s going on.
// connect is a function that returns another function const enhance =connect(commentListSelector, commentListActions); // The returned function is a HOC, which returns a component that is connected // to the Redux store const ConnectedComment =enhance(CommentList);
In other words,
connect
is a higher-order function that returns a higher-order component!
This form may seem confusing or unnecessary, but it has a useful property. Single-argument HOCs like the one returned by the
connect
function have the signature
Component => Component
. Functions whose output type is the same as its input type are really easy to compose together.
// Instead of doing this... const EnhancedComponent =withRouter(connect(commentSelector)(WrappedComponent))
// ... you can use a function composition utility // compose(f, g, h) is the same as (...args) => f(g(h(...args))) const enhance =compose( // These are both single-argument HOCs withRouter, connect(commentSelector) ) const EnhancedComponent =enhance(WrappedComponent)
(This same property also allows
connect
and other enhancer-style HOCs to be used as decorators, an experimental JavaScript proposal.)
The
compose
utility function is provided by many third-party libraries including lodash (as
lodash.flowRight
), Redux, and Ramda.
Convention: Wrap the Display Name for Easy Debugging
The container components created by HOCs show up in the React Developer Tools like any other component. To ease debugging, choose a display name that communicates that it’s the result of a HOC.
The most common technique is to wrap the display name of the wrapped component. So if your higher-order component is named
withSubscription
, and the wrapped component’s display name is
CommentList
, use the display name
WithSubscription(CommentList)
:
Higher-order components come with a few caveats that aren’t immediately obvious if you’re new to React.
Don’t Use HOCs Inside the render Method
React’s diffing algorithm (called Reconciliation) uses component identity to determine whether it should update the existing subtree or throw it away and mount a new one. If the component returned from
render
is identical (
===
) to the component from the previous render, React recursively updates the subtree by diffing it with the new one. If they’re not equal, the previous subtree is unmounted completely.
Normally, you shouldn’t need to think about this. But it matters for HOCs because it means you can’t apply a HOC to a component within the render method of a component:
render(){ // A new version of EnhancedComponent is created on every render // EnhancedComponent1 !== EnhancedComponent2 const EnhancedComponent =enhance(MyComponent); // That causes the entire subtree to unmount/remount each time! return<EnhancedComponent/>; }
The problem here isn’t just about performance — remounting a component causes the state of that component and all of its children to be lost.
Instead, apply HOCs outside the component definition so that the resulting component is created only once. Then, its identity will be consistent across renders. This is usually what you want, anyway.
In those rare cases where you need to apply a HOC dynamically, you can also do it inside a component’s lifecycle methods or its constructor.
Static Methods Must Be Copied Over
Sometimes it’s useful to define a static method on a React component. For example, Relay containers expose a static method
getFragment
to facilitate the composition of GraphQL fragments.
When you apply a HOC to a component, though, the original component is wrapped with a container component. That means the new component does not have any of the static methods of the original component.
// Define a static method WrappedComponent.staticMethod=function(){/*...*/} // Now apply a HOC const EnhancedComponent =enhance(WrappedComponent);
// The enhanced component has no static method typeof EnhancedComponent.staticMethod ==='undefined'// true
To solve this, you could copy the methods onto the container before returning it:
functionenhance(WrappedComponent){ classEnhanceextendsReact.Component{/*...*/} // Must know exactly which method(s) to copy :( Enhance.staticMethod = WrappedComponent.staticMethod; return Enhance; }
However, this requires you to know exactly which methods need to be copied. You can use hoist-non-react-statics to automatically copy all non-React static methods:
// ...export the method separately... export{ someFunction };
// ...and in the consuming module, import both import MyComponent,{ someFunction }from'./MyComponent.js';
Refs Aren’t Passed Through
While the convention for higher-order components is to pass through all props to the wrapped component, this does not work for refs. That’s because
ref
is not really a prop — like
key
, it’s handled specially by React. If you add a ref to an element whose component is the result of a HOC, the ref refers to an instance of the outermost container component, not the wrapped component.
The solution for this problem is to use the
React.forwardRef
API (introduced with React 16.3). Learn more about it in the forwarding refs section.
React is unaware of changes made to the DOM outside of React. It determines updates based on its own internal representation, and if the same DOM nodes are manipulated by another library, React gets confused and has no way to recover.
This does not mean it is impossible or even necessarily difficult to combine React with other ways of affecting the DOM, you just have to be mindful of what each is doing.
The easiest way to avoid conflicts is to prevent the React component from updating. You can do this by rendering elements that React has no reason to update, like an empty
<div />
.
How to Approach the Problem
To demonstrate this, let’s sketch out a wrapper for a generic jQuery plugin.
We will attach a ref to the root DOM element. Inside
componentDidMount
, we will get a reference to it so we can pass it to the jQuery plugin.
To prevent React from touching the DOM after mounting, we will return an empty
<div />
from the
render()
method. The
<div />
element has no properties or children, so React has no reason to update it, leaving the jQuery plugin free to manage that part of the DOM:
Note that we defined both
componentDidMount
and
componentWillUnmount
lifecycle methods. Many jQuery plugins attach event listeners to the DOM so it’s important to detach them in
componentWillUnmount
. If the plugin does not provide a method for cleanup, you will probably have to provide your own, remembering to remove any event listeners the plugin registered to prevent memory leaks.
Integrating with jQuery Chosen Plugin
For a more concrete example of these concepts, let’s write a minimal wrapper for the plugin Chosen, which augments
<select>
inputs.
Note:
Just because it’s possible, doesn’t mean that it’s the best approach for React apps. We encourage you to use React components when you can. React components are easier to reuse in React applications, and often provide more control over their behavior and appearance.
First, let’s look at what Chosen does to the DOM.
If you call it on a
<select>
DOM node, it reads the attributes off of the original DOM node, hides it with an inline style, and then appends a separate DOM node with its own visual representation right after the
<select>
. Then it fires jQuery events to notify us about the changes.
Let’s say that this is the API we’re striving for with our
<Chosen>
wrapper React component:
Notice how we wrapped
<select>
in an extra
<div>
. This is necessary because Chosen will append another DOM element right after the
<select>
node we passed to it. However, as far as React is concerned,
<div>
always only has a single child. This is how we ensure that React updates won’t conflict with the extra DOM node appended by Chosen. It is important that if you modify the DOM outside of React flow, you must ensure React doesn’t have a reason to touch those DOM nodes.
Next, we will implement the lifecycle methods. We need to initialize Chosen with the ref to the
<select>
node in
componentDidMount
, and tear it down in
componentWillUnmount
:
Note that React assigns no special meaning to the
this.el
field. It only works because we have previously assigned this field from a
ref
in the
render()
method:
This is enough to get our component to render, but we also want to be notified about the value changes. To do this, we will subscribe to the jQuery
change
event on the
<select>
managed by Chosen.
We won’t pass
this.props.onChange
directly to Chosen because component’s props might change over time, and that includes event handlers. Instead, we will declare a
handleChange()
method that calls
this.props.onChange
, and subscribe it to the jQuery
change
event:
Finally, there is one more thing left to do. In React, props can change over time. For example, the
<Chosen>
component can get different children if parent component’s state changes. This means that at integration points it is important that we manually update the DOM in response to prop updates, since we no longer let React manage the DOM for us.
Chosen’s documentation suggests that we can use jQuery
trigger()
API to notify it about changes to the original DOM element. We will let React take care of updating
this.props.children
inside
<select>
, but we will also add a
componentDidUpdate()
lifecycle method that notifies Chosen about changes in the children list:
React can be embedded into other applications thanks to the flexibility of
createRoot()
.
Although React is commonly used at startup to load a single root React component into the DOM,
createRoot()
can also be called multiple times for independent parts of the UI which can be as small as a button, or as large as an app.
In fact, this is exactly how React is used at Facebook. This lets us write applications in React piece by piece, and combine them with our existing server-generated templates and other client-side code.
Replacing String-Based Rendering with React
A common pattern in older web applications is to describe chunks of the DOM as a string and insert it into the DOM like so:
$el.html(htmlString)
. These points in a codebase are perfect for introducing React. Just rewrite the string based rendering as a React component.
From here you could start moving more logic into the component and begin adopting more common React practices. For example, in components it is best not to rely on IDs because the same component can be rendered multiple times. Instead, we will use the React event system and register the click handler directly on the React
<button>
element:
You can have as many such isolated components as you like, and use
ReactDOM.createRoot()
to render them to different DOM containers. Gradually, as you convert more of your app to React, you will be able to combine them into larger components, and move some of the
ReactDOM.createRoot()
calls up the hierarchy.
Embedding React in a Backbone View
Backbone views typically use HTML strings, or string-producing template functions, to create the content for their DOM elements. This process, too, can be replaced with rendering a React component.
Below, we will create a Backbone view called
ParagraphView
. It will override Backbone’s
render()
function to render a React
<Paragraph>
component into the DOM element provided by Backbone (
this.el
). Here, too, we are using
ReactDOM.createRoot()
:
It is important that we also call
root.unmount()
in the
remove
method so that React unregisters event handlers and other resources associated with the component tree when it is detached.
When a component is removed
from within
a React tree, the cleanup is performed automatically, but because we are removing the entire tree by hand, we must call this method.
Integrating with Model Layers
While it is generally recommended to use unidirectional data flow such as React state, Flux, or Redux, React components can use a model layer from other frameworks and libraries.
Using Backbone Models in React Components
The simplest way to consume Backbone models and collections from a React component is to listen to the various change events and manually force an update.
Components responsible for rendering models would listen to
'change'
events, while components responsible for rendering collections would listen for
'add'
and
'remove'
events. In both cases, call
this.forceUpdate()
to rerender the component with the new data.
In the example below, the
List
component renders a Backbone collection, using the
Item
component to render individual items.
The approach above requires your React components to be aware of the Backbone models and collections. If you later plan to migrate to another data management solution, you might want to concentrate the knowledge about Backbone in as few parts of the code as possible.
One solution to this is to extract the model’s attributes as plain data whenever it changes, and keep this logic in a single place. The following is a higher-order component that extracts all attributes of a Backbone model into state, passing the data to the wrapped component.
This way, only the higher-order component needs to know about Backbone model internals, and most components in the app can stay agnostic of Backbone.
In the example below, we will make a copy of the model’s attributes to form the initial state. We subscribe to the
change
event (and unsubscribe on unmounting), and when it happens, we update the state with the model’s current attributes. Finally, we make sure that if the
model
prop itself changes, we don’t forget to unsubscribe from the old model, and subscribe to the new one.
Note that this example is not meant to be exhaustive with regards to working with Backbone, but it should give you an idea for how to approach this in a generic way:
To demonstrate how to use it, we will connect a
NameInput
React component to a Backbone model, and update its
firstName
attribute every time the input changes:
functionNameInput(props){ return( <p> <inputvalue={props.firstName}onChange={props.handleChange}/><br/> My name is {props.firstName}.</p> ); }
const model =newBackbone.Model({firstName:'Frodo'}); const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root')); root.render(<Examplemodel={model}/>);
Try it on CodePen
This technique is not limited to Backbone. You can use React with any model library by subscribing to its changes in the lifecycle methods and, optionally, copying the data into the local React state.
If you want to test out how some specific JSX is converted into JavaScript, you can try out
the online Babel compiler.
Specifying The React Element Type
The first part of a JSX tag determines the type of the React element.
Capitalized types indicate that the JSX tag is referring to a React component. These tags get compiled into a direct reference to the named variable, so if you use the JSX
<Foo />
expression,
Foo
must be in scope.
React Must Be in Scope
Since JSX compiles into calls to
React.createElement
, the
React
library must also always be in scope from your JSX code.
For example, both of the imports are necessary in this code, even though
React
and
CustomButton
are not directly referenced from JavaScript:
If you don’t use a JavaScript bundler and loaded React from a
<script>
tag, it is already in scope as the
React
global.
Using Dot Notation for JSX Type
You can also refer to a React component using dot-notation from within JSX. This is convenient if you have a single module that exports many React components. For example, if
MyComponents.DatePicker
is a component, you can use it directly from JSX with:
When an element type starts with a lowercase letter, it refers to a built-in component like
<div>
or
<span>
and results in a string
'div'
or
'span'
passed to
React.createElement
. Types that start with a capital letter like
<Foo />
compile to
React.createElement(Foo)
and correspond to a component defined or imported in your JavaScript file.
We recommend naming components with a capital letter. If you do have a component that starts with a lowercase letter, assign it to a capitalized variable before using it in JSX.
For example, this code will not run as expected:
import React from'react';
// Wrong! This is a component and should have been capitalized:functionhello(props){// Correct! This use of <div> is legitimate because div is a valid HTML tag: return<div>Hello {props.toWhat}</div>; }
functionHelloWorld(){ // Wrong! React thinks <hello /> is an HTML tag because it's not capitalized:return<hellotoWhat="World"/>;}
To fix this, we will rename
hello
to
Hello
and use
<Hello />
when referring to it:
import React from'react';
// Correct! This is a component and should be capitalized:functionHello(props){// Correct! This use of <div> is legitimate because div is a valid HTML tag: return<div>Hello {props.toWhat}</div>; }
functionHelloWorld(){ // Correct! React knows <Hello /> is a component because it's capitalized.return<HellotoWhat="World"/>;}
Choosing the Type at Runtime
You cannot use a general expression as the React element type. If you do want to use a general expression to indicate the type of the element, just assign it to a capitalized variable first. This often comes up when you want to render a different component based on a prop:
functionStory(props){ // Correct! JSX type can be a capitalized variable.const SpecificStory = components[props.storyType];return<SpecificStorystory={props.story}/>;}
Props in JSX
There are several different ways to specify props in JSX.
JavaScript Expressions as Props
You can pass any JavaScript expression as a prop, by surrounding it with
{}
. For example, in this JSX:
<MyComponentfoo={1+2+3+4}/>
For
MyComponent
, the value of
props.foo
will be
10
because the expression
1 + 2 + 3 + 4
gets evaluated.
if
statements and
for
loops are not expressions in JavaScript, so they can’t be used in JSX directly. Instead, you can put these in the surrounding code. For example:
functionNumberDescriber(props){ let description; if(props.number %2==0){ description =<strong>even</strong>;}else{ description =<i>odd</i>;}return<div>{props.number} is an {description} number</div>; }
You can learn more about conditional rendering and loops in the corresponding sections.
String Literals
You can pass a string literal as a prop. These two JSX expressions are equivalent:
<MyComponentmessage="hello world"/>
<MyComponentmessage={'hello world'}/>
When you pass a string literal, its value is HTML-unescaped. So these two JSX expressions are equivalent:
<MyComponentmessage="<3"/>
<MyComponentmessage={'<3'}/>
This behavior is usually not relevant. It’s only mentioned here for completeness.
Props Default to “True”
If you pass no value for a prop, it defaults to
true
. These two JSX expressions are equivalent:
<MyTextBoxautocomplete/>
<MyTextBoxautocomplete={true}/>
In general, we don’t recommend
not
passing a value for a prop, because it can be confused with the ES6 object shorthand
{foo}
which is short for
{foo: foo}
rather than
{foo: true}
. This behavior is just there so that it matches the behavior of HTML.
Spread Attributes
If you already have
props
as an object, and you want to pass it in JSX, you can use
...
as a “spread” syntax to pass the whole props object. These two components are equivalent:
In the example above, the
kind
prop is safely consumed and
is not
passed on to the
<button>
element in the DOM.
All other props are passed via the
...other
object making this component really flexible. You can see that it passes an
onClick
and
children
props.
Spread attributes can be useful but they also make it easy to pass unnecessary props to components that don’t care about them or to pass invalid HTML attributes to the DOM. We recommend using this syntax sparingly.
Children in JSX
In JSX expressions that contain both an opening tag and a closing tag, the content between those tags is passed as a special prop:
props.children
. There are several different ways to pass children:
String Literals
You can put a string between the opening and closing tags and
props.children
will just be that string. This is useful for many of the built-in HTML elements. For example:
<MyComponent>Hello world!</MyComponent>
This is valid JSX, and
props.children
in
MyComponent
will simply be the string
"Hello world!"
. HTML is unescaped, so you can generally write JSX just like you would write HTML in this way:
<div>This is valid HTML & JSX at the same time.</div>
JSX removes whitespace at the beginning and ending of a line. It also removes blank lines. New lines adjacent to tags are removed; new lines that occur in the middle of string literals are condensed into a single space. So these all render to the same thing:
<div>Hello World</div>
<div> Hello World </div>
<div> Hello World </div>
<div>
Hello World </div>
JSX Children
You can provide more JSX elements as the children. This is useful for displaying nested components:
You can mix together different types of children, so you can use string literals together with JSX children. This is another way in which JSX is like HTML, so that this is both valid JSX and valid HTML:
<div> Here is a list: <ul> <li>Item 1</li> <li>Item 2</li> </ul> </div>
A React component can also return an array of elements:
render(){ // No need to wrap list items in an extra element! return[ // Don't forget the keys :) <likey="A">First item</li>, <likey="B">Second item</li>, <likey="C">Third item</li>, ]; }
JavaScript Expressions as Children
You can pass any JavaScript expression as children, by enclosing it within
{}
. For example, these expressions are equivalent:
<MyComponent>foo</MyComponent>
<MyComponent>{'foo'}</MyComponent>
This is often useful for rendering a list of JSX expressions of arbitrary length. For example, this renders an HTML list:
functionTodoList(){ const todos =['finish doc','submit pr','nag dan to review']; return( <ul> {todos.map((message)=><Itemkey={message}message={message}/>)}</ul> ); }
JavaScript expressions can be mixed with other types of children. This is often useful in lieu of string templates:
Normally, JavaScript expressions inserted in JSX will evaluate to a string, a React element, or a list of those things. However,
props.children
works just like any other prop in that it can pass any sort of data, not just the sorts that React knows how to render. For example, if you have a custom component, you could have it take a callback as
props.children
:
// Calls the children callback numTimes to produce a repeated component functionRepeat(props){ let items =[]; for(let i =0; i < props.numTimes; i++){ items.push(props.children(i)); } return<div>{items}</div>; }
functionListOfTenThings(){ return( <RepeatnumTimes={10}> {(index)=><divkey={index}>This is item {index} in the list</div>}</Repeat> ); }
Children passed to a custom component can be anything, as long as that component transforms them into something React can understand before rendering. This usage is not common, but it works if you want to stretch what JSX is capable of.
Booleans, Null, and Undefined Are Ignored
false
,
null
,
undefined
, and
true
are valid children. They simply don’t render. These JSX expressions will all render to the same thing:
<div/>
<div></div>
<div>{false}</div>
<div>{null}</div>
<div>{undefined}</div>
<div>{true}</div>
This can be useful to conditionally render React elements. This JSX renders the
<Header />
component only if
showHeader
is
true
:
<div> {showHeader &&<Header/>}<Content/> </div>
One caveat is that some “falsy” values, such as the
0
number, are still rendered by React. For example, this code will not behave as you might expect because
0
will be printed when
props.messages
is an empty array: