# switch to starter branch to get new starter code
git checkout starter
# download new starter code
git pull
# switch back to main branch for coding
git checkout main
# merge in new starter code (use default msg)
git merge starter --no-edit
# code and enjoy!
Get the starter code from the starter branch, but do all of your work on main.
Vite provides a development server which will:
# Make sure you are in the project directory
cd path/to/project
# Install dependencies for existing project (installs vite)
npm install
# Run the development server script
npm run dev
We define components as functions that return the DOM elements to be rendered
//declare a function to define a component -- this is like a class
function HelloMessage(props) {
//this function returns the elements (JSX)
//that make up the component
return (
<h1>Hello World!</h1>
);
}
//"call" function to create a new element value!
const msgElem = <HelloMessage />;
//show the content in the web page (inside #root)
const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root'));
root.render(msgElem)
what is rendered when
component is shown
our own HTML tags!
Capitalize!
To use Bootstrap (styling) in React, install the library as a dependency and then import the css file.
Install the dependency
# you must be in the React project folder
cd path/to/my-react-app
# install dependency
npm install bootstrap
/* in index.js */
import 'bootstrap/dist/css/bootstrap.css';
import 'my-style.css' // import your stylesheet afterwards
Import the stylesheet
props
)
function MessageItem(props) {
const message = props.message; //access the prop
//can use prop for logic or processing
const messageUpper = message.toUpperCase();
return <li>{messageUpper}</li>; //render based on prop
}
ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root'))
.render(<MessageItem message="Be quiet" />)
Inside the Component function definition, all the passed in props are passed in as a single argument object (conventionally called props)
ALL props stored in this object
function MessageList(props) {
//msgComponents will be an array of components!
const msgComponents = props.messages.map((msgStr) => {
const elem = <MessageItem message={msgStr} key={msgStr} />; //pass prop down!
return elem
}
return (
<ul>
{/* An array of components renders as siblings */}
{msgComponents}
</ul>
);
}
const messagesArray = ["Hello world", "No borders", "Go huskies!"];
ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root'))
.render(<MessageList messages={messagesArray} />)
Props will often need to be "passed down" to child components. A common pattern is to map an array of prop values to an array of children components to render!
unique "id" for the element
You can use control logic (if statements) to specify whether or not a component should be rendered.
function ConditionalPanel(props) {
//assign element to show to variable
let thingToRender = null; //null element will not render
if(conditionOne){ //based on props or state
thingToRender = <OptionA />
} else if(conditionTwo) {
thingToRender = <OptionB />
} else if(conditionThree) {
return null; //show nothing!
}
//keep return statement as simple as possible!
return (<div>{thingToRender}</div>);
}
function ConditionPanel(props) {
//can use inline expressions via shortcutting. Not recommended
return (
<div>
{conditionOne == true && <OptionA />}
</div>
)
}
We add user interaction in React the same way as with the DOM: by listening for events and executing callback functions when they occur.
function MyButton(props) {
//A function that will be called when clicked
//The name is conventional, but arbitrary.
//The callback will be passed the DOM event as usual
const handleClick = function(event) {
console.log("clicky clicky");
}
//make a button with an `onClick` attribute!
//this "registers" the listener and sets the callback
return <button onClick={handleClick}>Click me!</button>;
}
special React prop
can only put listeners on HTML
elements, not Components!
function MyButton(props) {
//A function that will be called when clicked
//The name is conventional, but arbitrary.
//The callback will be passed the DOM event as usual
const handleClick = (event) => {
console.log("clicky clicky");
}
//make a button with an `onClick` attribute!
//this "registers" the listener and sets the callback
return <button onClick={handleClick}>Click me!</button>;
}
//The current "state"
const state = {
data: [ {}, {}, {} ],
...
}
//define presentation - lots of these kinds of functions
function renderData() {
//render all the data
//...
}
//define user interaction
button.addEventListener('click', function() {
//MODIFY THE STATE
state.data[i] = ...;
//CLEAR OLD VIEW AND RE-RENDER CONTENT
document.querySelector('#main').innerHTML = '';
renderData(); //RE-RENDER CONTENT
})
changeable data lives out here
1. modify the state data
2. re-render the view
2. re-render the view
On button click, do 2 things:
In addition to the props, React components can also track their internal state. This keeps track of information about the Component that may change due to user interaction.
State is reserved only for interactivity, that is, data that changes over time
Some examples of state data:
You add state to a component by using a state hook. The hook defines a "state variable" which will retain its value across Component function calls, as well as a function to update that variable.
//import the state hook function `useState()` to define state
import React, { useState } from 'react';
function CountingButton(props) {
const [count, setCount] = useState(0);
const handleClick = (event) => {
setCount(count+1); //update the state to be a new value
//and RE-RENDER the Component!
}
return (
<button onClick={handleClick}>Clicked {count} times</button>
);
}
state variable
update function
initial value for variable
In order to write correct React (that can be understood
and debugged by you and others), you need to follow the naming conventions:
React state is changed asynchronously (for speed). Calling a "state-setter" function (when ready) and automatically re-render the Component (by calling the function again).
function CountingButton(props) {
const [count, setCount] = useState(3) //initial value of 3
const handleClick = (event) => {
setCount(4); //change `count` to 4 AND re-render!
console.log(count); //will output "3";
//state has not changed yet!
}
console.log(count); //will have "current" value of state
//3 first render, 4 after clicking
return (
<button onClick={handleClick}>Clicked {count} times</button>
);
}
Because state changes are asynchronous, you can only "see" them after the component has re-rendered. Use console logs at the "rendering" step to debug
function CountingButton(props) {
const [count, setCount] = useState(3) //initial value of 3
console.log("DEBUG: count", count); //debug! variable here,
//after re-render
const handleClick = (event) => {
setCount(count + 1); //incremenet count AND re-render!
//do not debug variable here!
}
return (
<button onClick={handleClick}>Clicked {count} times</button>
);
}
Components can (and often do) contain multiple state variables.
//Example from React documentation
function ExampleWithManyStates(props) {
//Declare multiple state variables!
const [age, setAge] = useState(42);
const [fruit, setFruit] = useState('banana');
const [todos, setTodos] = useState([{ text: 'Learn Hooks' }]);
//...
}
state variable is an array of objects!
State variables will only be updated if a different value is passed to the setter function. For arrays and objects, pass a copy of the element with an updated element or property.
function TodoListWithError(props) {
//a state value that is an array of objects
const [todos, setTodos] = useState([{ text: 'Learn Hooks' }]);
const handleClick = (event) => {
todos[0].text = "Fix bugs"; //modify the object
//but don't make a new one
setTodos(todos) //This won't work! Not "changing"
}
//...
}
function TodoList(props) {
//a state value that is an array of objects
const [todos, setTodos] = useState([{ text: 'Learn Hooks' }]);
const handleClick = (event) => {
//create a copy of the array using the `map()` function
const todosCopy = todos.map((todoObject, index) => {
if(index == 0) { //transform objects if needed
todoObject.text = "Fix bugs"
}
return todoObject; //return object to go into new array
})
setTodos(todosCopy) //This works!
}
//...
}
props are for information that doesn’t change from the Component’s perspective, including “initial” data. state is for information that will change, usually due to user interaction (see React FAQ).
props are for information that doesn’t change from the Component’s perspective, including “initial” data. state is for information that will change, usually due to user interaction (see React FAQ).
Complete task list for Week 7 (items 1-2 !!)
Read/review: Chapter 15-16
Problem Set 07 due next week
This is the biggest and hardest set!
You can do problem-a now!
Start now so you have time
Next: Adding interactivity!