I am a beginner and I am learning React JS. I am making a demo project. I need a help there.
In my app.js there is routes shop.js and review.js. The data and states is in shop.js. Now how can I pass some states data on review.js from shop.js?
Image
How can I do that?
It's recommended to lift the shared state up to their closest common ancestor (app.js).
please check
https://reactjs.org/docs/lifting-state-up.html
You could use Context
Context provides a way to pass data through the component tree without having to pass props down manually at every level.
In a typical React application, data is passed top-down (parent to child) via props, but such usage can be cumbersome for certain types of props (e.g. locale preference, UI theme) that are required by many components within an application. Context provides a way to share values like these between components without having to explicitly pass a prop through every level of the tree.
Related
Let's say that I'm fetching some images from an API in the App component.
Then I want to pass it to the component responsible to rendering images. But this component is not a direct child to the App component. It is the child of a direct child of App component.
Here's how I would pass the images array down to the image component, but I feel like it might not be the best approach.
But what would happen if this hierarchy gets more complex - even just by one more component:
Intuitively, it might not be the best thing.
So, what would be the best way to pass the images array down to the image component, if there are many other children between them?
The problem is usually called Prop Drilling in the React world: https://kentcdodds.com/blog/prop-drilling
A few options:
Passing props may not be that bad. If the app is small, is a very modular -and easy to unit test- option . You can reduce the verbosity by using prop spread: <Comp {...props} /> and by keeping your component interfaces similar. (many people dislike prop spreading as you can unintentionally pass unsupported props, but if you use TypeScript the compiler will catch that).
You can use a React Context: https://reactjs.org/docs/context.html (as other mention in the comments). However, keep an eye on how your context objects are defined (keep them small). React will re-render all the childs using the context when the value changes, is not smart enough to automatically detect changes at the property level. Frameworks like Redux or Zustand use other mechanisms to allow a granular control of the shared state (you'll see examples of a useSelector hook).
You can also take a look to a state management framework (Zustand is my favorite, but Redux is more popular). However, it may be an overkill for small things.
My personal choice is to start with prop drilling, it's easier to modularize and unit test. Then you can think on your app in layers: upper layers depend on a context (or a state framework), and lower layers receive properties. That helps when you want to refactor and move reusable components to other projects.
While I'm learning React, it's always said that you should keep your state in the parent component and pass them as props to its children.
But in the real world, whenever I start building a react app, I end up passing data from a child component to its parent.
For example, if I have to implement a form somewhere in my react app, I create an extra component for it (for example, FormComponent) and import it in my App component.
But now, I have to pass the form data form the FormComponent to the App component. In other words, from the child component (FormComponent) to the parent (App component).
And this was just an example. Usually, I always end up in situations where I have to pass data from child to parent rather than the other way around.
Do I misunderstand the concept of passing props completely?
If we stay with the above example, is my approach, right?
You can't pass data from child to parent as in React, The Data Flows Down.
So usually you pass callbacks from parent to its children, but the state remains in the parent.
This is commonly called a “top-down” or “unidirectional” data flow. Any state is always owned by some specific component, and any data or UI derived from that state can only affect components “below” them in the tree.
If you in a situation where the code becomes unreadable, unmaintainable, you should consider Lifting the State Up.
Often, several components need to reflect the same changing data. We recommend lifting the shared state up to their closest common ancestor.
Aside from it, a common anti-pattern is Prop Drilling, Context API, and many state libraries like Redux, MobX, and Recoil trying to solve such problems with some extra features.
1- In your case you can pass a function ( Example: handleSubmit() ) through props from parent to child.
And so when this function is called the child's data would be hundled from the parent.
you can use this doc page to inspire your code.
2- Otherwise you can use react redux, and then you can hundle all data at any component in your project using one global state called redux store.
want to learn more about react redux click here.
3- Have a nice day ^_^ .
I'm having trouble understanding when I should be passing props down to child components rather connecting those components directly to the state.
There are two ways that components in my project receive props:
1) Connecting a component (child or parent) to the global state of redux. This allows me to specify which parts of the global state my component will receive, but will re-render when a prop changes.
const mapStateToProps = state => ({
error: state.error,
progress: state.scan.progress,
latitude: parseFloat(state.enrollment.latitude),
longitude: parseFloat(state.enrollment.longitude),
});
export default connect(mapStateToProps)(MapViewHome);
2) Passing props down to child components in typical React-Native fashion.
<MapViewHome error={this.props.error} progress={this.props.progress} latitude={this.props.latitude} longitude={this.props.longitude} />
The reason I'm asking this is because I have parent component A which is connected to the state.
Parent component A passes prop x directly to child B which passes the same prop x to child C.
If prop x changes, this will cause components A, B, and C to re render. I could avoid the re rendering of components A and B by connecting child C directly to the state, so that it is the only component effected by the prop change.
But is it good practice to connect small child components to the global state like that? Why not just connect every component to the state?
This is a complex issue that the redux / react community discuss a ton.
You can probably find tons of Medium articles and React / Redux authors that discuss this.
But to give you a high level overview; If it seems like it's a pain to 'drill' props down from CompA -> CompB -> CompC -> CompD, store the data in redux.
If the data only needs to go from CompD -> CompE, you can pass it down as props.
You could store every prop that needs to be shared into redux as well. Just be aware of managing your redux object and try to normalize and manage the giant object.
Ultimately, it is up to you as the developer to make these decisions, as there is no silver bullet for this answer.
The main advantage of using stateless components is reusability. Using your example, a stateless version of MapViewHome could be used to display multiple maps of different lat/lngs on the screen at the same time since you can pass different props to each one. A stateful MapViewHome could only display one since it relies on global state.
So it's really up to you how to want to architect your components. I think it's a good idea to always start with stateless components but if your use case doesn't require reusability then using a stateful component is fine.
Typically, you don't need to use your store when you're capturing form data or if you're simply trying to hide and unhide elements. For example, you might want to have the local state change when you're typing data in a field and then you might use that local state to pass down to a thunk creator that you're dispatching. If you can provide a bit more context about what specifically you are trying to achieve here, I'd be happy to provide more guidance!
I'm developing a react.js project and before the main component is rendered, I call a function that returns an object that all components should be able to access. What is the correct way of doing this in react? Currently, I'm just passing it as a prop to the main component and then I suppose I should have to remember to pass it as a prop to all other components. Is there an easier or better way of doing this?
It seems like you are doing something like Redux. Passing the object as props should be okay. You could make a higher-order component that wraps your components and adds access to that global object via props. This is similar to Redux's connect.
As the expectation in React is application-wide concerns ,like a flux/redux/apollo store, are kept in a root provider component’s context and then accessed elsewhere in the component tree via a Higher Order Component or render props. This provides relief from globals and circular dependencies, and makes testing those components easier.
However, if you have non-component code that will need access to configuration values, you may need to use config global and writing components in a way that accepts config values from props.
see: https://github.com/lorenwest/node-config
In the flux tutorial, it says that "Application state is maintained only in the stores."
Short version: I have a variable number of components in my app, each of which maintains state. How am I supposed to use stores here? It seems like I need one store per component.
Long version:
I wanted to create a tree of text elements with a variable number of nodes (essentially an app that just lets me create an arbitrary tree and visualize it in HTML).
My current architecture has a Tree element in React, maintains the state:
{ children: [], // children are trees.
parent: someParent }
However, given that each subtree in my tree has state, it appears that I will need one store per subtree! What is the correct way to architect this code?
No, keep the state in just 1 component. All the other components should get their data in the form of props.
In addition, the component that keeps the state shouldn't be aware of the state, but you should be using a store to keep it. Generally, these types of components that know about the state, are named "Container Components". Those components that don't know about state and receive their data with props are called "Presentational Components" (or "dumb components"). Read more here: http://redux.js.org/docs/basics/UsageWithReact.html
Use Redux architecture
Keep your state global,
use container components and reducers to pass props to your components.
http://redux.js.org/docs/api/bindActionCreators.html