DOM remove method in react js - javascript

I want to change remove a certain tag with an id in the html page, eg.<div id="theid"><p>sometext</p></div> Is there any ways to do it with react js? I know I can do it with javascript by document.getElementById("theid").remove();, how can I do it in the react way? I don't need a button or anything, just simply remove it when the page loads. I'd prefer methods without importing any modules or libraries if possible. Thank you.

You should likely use a ref:
https://reactjs.org/docs/refs-and-the-dom.html
So you attach the ref to the DOM element, then you can imperatively remove that element just like you specified.
So in the component function body:
const myRef = useRef();
Then in the component render:
<Component ref={myRef} />
Then you can use the code in your question to remove the element from the DOM.
ref.remove();
If you need to do it when the page loads look at using useEffect to achieve this. Although if you're removing an element on page load, I question why you even need the element there in the first place ;).

If it's rendered as part of React, the right way to do it would be to simply omit it from the source code:
const App = () => (
<div>
<div id="theid">foo</div>
<div>more content</div>
</div>
);
to
const App = () => (
<div>
<div>more content</div>
</div>
);
If it's not part of React, then remove it from whatever process generates the HTML.
If that's not an option - if it must be part of the HTML served to the client and it's not rendered as part of React - then you'll have to resort to doing what you're currently doing:
document.getElementById("theid").remove();
probably completely separate from your React script, since it's something you want to do only once, when the page loads, and not something that needs to be a part of the React lifecycles.

Related

React focus div after it has loaded

I'm currently experimenting with React, and I've now run into an issue that I can't seem to solve.
In my application, I use a React library to handle hotkeys, these hotkeys have a scope, so when I want a certain set of hotkeys to be active in a div, I have to wrap that div with a <HotKeys> tag.
I have to toggle some of these divs, so I'll have something along the lines of
isActive ?
<HotKeys ...>
<div ...>...</div>
</HotKeys>
: <div ...>...</div>
I now need to figure out a way to focus the div when it's created. Pretty much every article on the web suggest something like this:
const focusRef = useRef(null);
useEffect(() => {
focusRef.current.focus()
})
return (
isActive ?
<HotKeys ...>
<div ref={focusRef} tabIndex={-1} ...>...</div>
</HotKeys>
: <div ...>...</div>
)
I've tried some variations, including having the div top level (without the <HotKeys> wrapping them), all to no avail.
When I print the focusRef object in the useEffect method, I do get the expected output, focusRef is correctly set and current is populated, but calling the focus method doesn't work. At one point I tried calling the focus method from a button and manually triggering it after the component had fully loaded, it seemed to work (document.activeElement was being changed), then for some reason it stopped working again. All this leads me to believe that somehow the component hasn't fully loaded, despite calling the useEffect hook, which, if I understand correctly, triggers when the element has rendered for the first time/after every change to state.
I'd really appreciate some help with this, since I basically started learning React yesterday.
You must to use an useCallback , because useRef don't notifies you when ref was created
https://reactjs.org/docs/hooks-reference.html#useref
I think I figured it out.
You were right about using the tabIndex but you needed to pass it in as a string like this:
tabIndex={"-1"}
When you first load it a dotted line box surrounds the div that has the ref attached.
check out this code sandbox:
https://codesandbox.io/s/nifty-wildflower-eqjtk?file=/src/App.js
grabbed from this accepted answer where they pass in a string:
Need to put focus on div in react

JSX HTML string variable displaying as text

I have a JSON file with a variable called htmlContent. I am trying to display this in a component but when it is rendered it shows it as text. I just want the text to be surrounded by an h2 tag.
MY JSON FILE
const BookData = {
data: [
{
id:"1",
pageHeader:"Contents",
htmlContent:`<h2>hello</h2>`,
definePrototypes:"",
exportComponent:"export default App;"
}
]
};
MY REACT COMPONENT
<section id='content'>
{props.htmlContent }
</section>
MY ACTUAL RESULT
<h2>hello</h2>
MY EXPECTED RESULT
hello
You need to use dangerouslySetInnerHTML to render html content in react, otherwise it will show as string
Change to be made in this element
<section id='content'>
{props.htmlContent }
</section>
Change the above block to
<section id='content' dangerouslySetInnerHTML={{ __html: props.htmlContent }}></section>
This should do the job. Check the link for details https://reactjs.org/docs/dom-elements.html#dangerouslysetinnerhtml
Try this
<div contentEditable='true' dangerouslySetInnerHTML={{ __html: props.htmlContent }}></div>
The immediate effect of using innerHTML versus dangerouslySetInnerHTML is identical -- the DOM node will update with the injected HTML.
However, behind the scenes when you use dangerouslySetInnerHTML it lets React know that the HTML inside of that component is not something it cares about.
Because React uses a virtual DOM, when it goes to compare the diff against the actual DOM, it can straight up bypass checking the children of that node because it knows the HTML is coming from another source. So there's performance gains.
More importantly- if you simply use innerHTML, React has no way to know the DOM node has been modified. The next time the render function is called, React will overwrite the content that was manually injected with what it thinks the correct state of that DOM node should be.
Your solution to use componentDidUpdate to always ensure the content is in sync I believe would work but there might be a flash during each render.
Reference Dangerously Set innerHTML
If React is imported in the JS file you can just remove the ticks(`) from the JSON like this:
const BookData = {
data: [
{
id:"1",
pageHeader:"Contents",
htmlContent:<h2>hello</h2>,
definePrototypes:"",
exportComponent:"export default App;"
}
]
};

How to make a React.js inline portal for a jQuery Datepicker

I've watched,
http://youtu.be/z5e7kWSHWTg?t=15m17s
and read,
https://github.com/ryanflorence/react-training/blob/gh-pages/lessons/05-wrapping-dom-libs.md
https://github.com/ryanflorence/react-training/tree/gh-pages/code/Dialog
http://jsbin.com/dutuqimawo/edit?js,output
How to create a React Modal(which is append to `<body>`) with transitions?
and I get the concept of the Portal, that you're tricking React into ceasing its rendering for one piece of the DOM, then continuing the rendering afterward, so you can tinker with that piece of the DOM without confusing React by making its virtual DOM get out of sync.
My problem is that the examples all address a Dialog that is rendered at the end of the page, but appears inline when you're reviewing your code. It's a cool trick for using a jQuery modal, but I need a jQuery datepicker whose div actually remains where I put it. (As an aside, I'm also curious about GetDOMNode's presence in the examples when it's deprecated? I suppose you use FindDOMNode, although you call it slightly differently, plus the documentation says "In most cases, use of this escape hatch is discouraged because it pierces the component abstraction", which makes me a little gunshy to use it.)
To isolate the jQuery datepicker from React, I originally created one React component to handle everything above the datepicker, and another to handle everything below the datepicker, and used event listeners in each component to listen for updates. However, I prefer the design of a single parent component that passes everything down to its children; it seems like a cleaner design.
I redesigned it with a single parent and it seems to work, but I have no idea if my portal is really isolated from React's virtual DOM or not; it's my first crack at a portal so I'm really muddling through. (I am using React-Bootstrap for my navbar and it works great; I just couldn't find an equivalent to jQuery's datepicker and I like how it looks and operates, which is why I'm sticking with it.)
Here's my top-level component (I removed the props/componentDidMount/etc for clarity). The <CalendarControl /> is going to be the portal:
var ReactApp = React.createClass({
render: function() {
return (
<div>
<BootstrapNavbar division={this.state.division} dps={this.state.dps} sections={this.state.sections} />
<div className="container">
<br />
<br />
<br />
<div className="row">
<div className="col-md-4" id="calendarPortal">
<CalendarControl />
</div>
<div className="col-md-8">
<h3>{this.state.dp}</h3>
<h4>{this.state.dpStartDate} - {this.state.dpEndDate}</h4>
</div>
</div>
<TimebookTableRecords timebookRecords={this.state.timebookRecs} />
</div>
</div>
);
}
});
Here's the code for my CalendarControl portal. When the CalendarControl mounts, I'm creating a new div calendarControl as a child of calendarPortal. I then use jQuery to create the datepicker on the calendarControl div.
var CalendarControl = React.createClass({
render: function () {
return null;
},
componentDidMount() {
var portalLocation = document.getElementById("calendarPortal");
var newElement = document.createElement('div');
newElement.id = "calendarControl";
portalLocation.appendChild(newElement);
},
componentWillUnmount() {
var portalLocation = document.getElementById("calendarPortal");
document.body.removeChild(portalLocation);
},
});
Here's the jQuery code that creates a datepicker on the calendarControl div:
$("#calendarControl").datepicker({
numberOfMonths: monthDiff,
defaultDate: dpStartDate,
showButtonPanel: false,
beforeShowDay: formatCalendarDays, //formatter function
onSelect: dateClicked //handles click on calendar date
The final product seems to work fine, and doesn't generate any "the DOM was unexpectedly mutated" errors like when you manipulate part of the DOM that's under React's purview. I can update the state of the parent and see the changes propagate down nicely, and use jQuery to update the calendar.
However, I just don't know if this is the correct approach? That is to say, have I achieved a true portal here? I used the Google Chrome React Developer Tools add-in to inspect the component hierarchy, and it does look like from React's perspective there's a null in the CalendarControl div:
Thanks for bearing with me in this lengthy post. I have to say that so far I'm really loving the React approach to web development; it's so radically different that it took a number of readings and tinkering just to understand its concepts, but now it seems so much more elegant than the ways I've done it in the past.
From my understanding of portals, you are doing this mostly correct. But if it had any other children, you would have to reconnect with react after the jquery stuff, but I assume that is not the case here.
The reason you are seeing a "null" inside calendar control is because you return a null in your CalendarControl render function.
Why don't you just change your render function in calendarControl to:
render: function () {
return (
<div id="calendarControl"></div>
)
and do all your funky jQuery rendering inside componentDidMount function?

React component ignores dynamic element while re-rendering

I have developed a react component with three div elements like below.
render: function(){
return (
<div id="div_1">
<div id="div_2"></div>
<div>
Click the below button
Click here
</div>
</div>
);
})
In runtime, using jquery am inserting few elements into "div_2" div like below.
componentDidMount: function(){
//Invoking global function, which is outside react
window.loadView();
}
And my load view method looks somthing like below,
function loadView(){
$('#div_2').html('//my elements')
}
Now to my surprise, when I change the status of my react component, the view is getting re-rendered but somehow the contents within "div_2" remains undisturbed. Can someone say why this behaviour?
React has its own virtual copy of the DOM, hidden somewhere. React uses this to do its magic in only updating DOM when something changed from state A to state B.
In your example, React is unaware of the changes you made with jQuery to <div 2>. So, as far a React knows, <div 2> is unchanged, so React does not update it.
I would strongly advise against mixing React and jQuery for updates to components. If you want to keep your code manageable, give React the exclusive monopoly to update the DOM.
In your case, I would advise to let React only manage the inner part, like so:
render: function(){
return (
<div>
Click the below button
Click here
</div>
);
})
And in your HTML:
<div id="div_1">
<div id="div_2"></div>
<div id="react-only domain"></div> // mount your ReactDOM here
</div>
You should use componentDidUpdate in your case instead of componentDidMount.

Child Component in React (Meteor) not firing events

folks. I'm a relatively new Meteor developer, and after learning Blaze, I decided to start learning React, because it seemed like the right thing to do, and I sort of liked the idea of how it worked.
Anyway, I'm having issues with a bit of code I'm working on, and could use some guidance... I've got the following segments of code:
https://gist.github.com/czbaker/2101526219eea5330553
For some reason, when the form in the component is submitted, it isn't firing the function that's meant to handle submission. Instead, it refreshes the page (as event.preventDefault() never happens).
What would be causing this to happen? As per suggested on IRC, I've tried replacing onSubmit={this.handleSubmit} with the following:
onSubmit={()=>{this.handleSubmit}}
onSubmit={this.handleSubmit()}
Neither of them had any effect, the form submission function still isn't being called. I'm really confused, because I followed documentation for the most part, and it looks like it should be working.
As I'm really new to React, I'm sure I'm overlooking something, but have no idea what. Can anyone offer me some aid? Thanks in advance!
The current project is also in a BitBucket repository, for those who need it https://bitbucket.org/czbaker/karuto/
All I've been able to figure out so far is that if I render the problem component by itself (not as a child of another component) using ReactLayout, it works fine, but the second that I try to render it as a child component (doing it the way it's shown in MDG's Todos tutorial (React version), events refuse to fire, yet there's no errors.
Thanks in advance for help.
The problem is you are attempting to render the entire HTML tree using React.
If you are using flow-router and react-layout, you can simply render the document fragment that you desire and it will be placed in a designated root node which id is 'react-root'.
Otherwise, I would suggest using static-html if you don't need blaze and create a root element for React:
some_file.html:
<body>
<div id="react-container"></div>
</body>
and then render the root component into it using your preferred router.
Then, change the title dynamically via a ReactiveVar or some other method.
I am using React with React Router, alongside Google's MDL, and had the same issue (as well as a few others, such as navigating to different routes would cause a full page reload).
When attempting to find the cause, I found that removing the MDL classes from the the div surrounding {this.props.children} in my parent component resulted in the event listeners firing correctly.
After investigating, it appears that this is due to the way that MDL structures the DOM nodes, and can be resolved by either calling componentHandler.upgradeDOM() in each child component's componentDidUpdate() method, as follows:
App = React.createClass({
render() {
return(
<div className="mdl-layout mdl-js-layout">
...
<div className="mdl-layout__content">
{ this.props.children }
</div>
</div>
);
}
});
ChildComponent = React.createClass({
handleClick() {
alert("I've been clicked!");
},
render() {
return(
<div>
<button onClick={this.handleClick}
className="mdl-button mdl-js-button">Click Me</button>
</div>
);
},
componentDidUpdate() {
componentHandler.upgradeDOM();
},
});
As outlined here, http://quaintous.com/2015/07/09/react-components-with-mdl/; or by using a 'patched' version of MDL, like the one here:
https://github.com/tleunen/react-mdl
I know this is a little different to the OP's issue, but I figured I'd add this here in the hopes that it helps someone else with this issue. :)
In my Layout.jsx i changed
export default class extends React.Component {
render() {
return(
<body>
...some jsx
</body>
);
}
}
to
export default class extends React.Component {
render() {
return(
<div>
...some jsx
</div>
);
}
}
and it helps, now the React events are working fine

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