Let's say I've a parent component A and a child B:
A:
class A {
constructor() {
this.state = {data: []};
}
handleClick = () => {
// api call
// set data state to the returned value from api
// call B's createTable method
}
render() {
return(
<div>
<button onClick={()=> this.handleClick()}>Fetch data</button>
<B data={this.state.data} />
</div>
}
}
B:
class B {
constructor() {
this.state = {...};
}
createTable = () => {
const { data } = this.props;
// do smth
}
render() {
return(...);
}
}
I want to call createTable method from A without using Refs.
What I've done so far is using componentDidUpdate life cycle method in B to check if data prop has changed or not, If it changed call createTable method but I want to know is this right? or there's a better way of doing it because I feel it is kinda hacky or maybe bad design.
class B {
constructor() {
this.state = {...};
}
componentDidUpdate(prevProps) {
const { data } = this.props;
if (data !== prevProps.data) {
this.createTable();
}
}
createTable = () => {
const { data } = this.props;
// do smth
}
render() {
return(...);
}
}
NOTE I don't want to use hooks either just class based component.
The following example might be useful
class Parent extends Component {
render() {
return (
<div>
<Child setClick={click => this.clickChild = click}/>
<button onClick={() => this.clickChild()}>Click</button>
</div>
);
}
}
class Child extends Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.getAlert = this.getAlert.bind(this);
}
componentDidMount() {
this.props.setClick(this.getAlert);
}
getAlert() {
alert('clicked');
}
render() {
return (
<h1 ref="hello">Hello</h1>
);
}
}
child component
export class child extends Component {
buttonclick() {
const { pin } = this.props
if (pin === null) {
add().then(result => {
updatePin(result.data)
})
} else {
remove(pin.id).then(result => {
updatePin(result)
})
}
}
render() {
const { pin } = this.props
const label =
pin === null
? 'yes'
: 'no'
const icon =pin === null ? 'yes' : 'no'
return (
<div>
<Button
icon={icon}
label={label}
onClick={() => this.buttonclick()}
/>
</div>
)
}
}
parent component(classless component)
const parent= props =>{
const { pins = []} = props
const { pin } = Data
}
const updatePin = result => {
// here iam updating the pin
}
const renderchildComponent=()=>{
return(
<div>
<ChildComponent
pin={pin}
updatePin={result => updatePin(result)}
/>
</div>
)
}
here in the above code the pin is updating in the parent component but how to pass it to child component every time when the button click happens without refreshing the page. please help me out with this
I'm beginner on react and i've written the code below:
class Note extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {editing: false};
this.edit = this.edit.bind(this);
this.save = this.save.bind(this);
}
edit() {
// alert('edit');
this.setState({editing: !this.state.editing});
}
save() {
this.props.onChange(this.refs.newVal.value, this.props.id);
this.setState({editing: !this.state.editing});
// console.log('save is over');
}
renderForm() {
return (
<div className="note">
<textarea ref="newVal"></textarea>
<button onClick={this.save}>SAVE</button>
</div>
);
}
renderDisplay() {
return (
<div className="note">
<p>{this.props.children}</p>
<span>
<button onClick={this.edit}>EDIT</button>
<button onClick={this.remove}>X</button>
</span>
</div>
);
}
render() {
console.log(this.state.editing);
return (this.state.editing) ? this.renderForm()
: this.renderDisplay()
}
}
class Board extends React.Component {
constructor(props){
super(props);
this.state = {
notes: []
};
this.update = this.update.bind(this);
this.eachNote = this.eachNote.bind(this);
this.add = this.add.bind(this);
}
nextId() {
this.uniqeId = this.uniqeId || 0;
return this.uniqeId++;
}
add(text) {
let notes = [
...this.state.notes,
{
id: this.nextId(),
note: text
}
];
this.setState({notes});
}
update(newText, id) {
let notes = this.state.notes.map(
note => (note.id !== id) ?
note :
{
id: id,
note: newText
}
);
this.setState({notes})
}
eachNote(note) {
return (<Note key={note.id}
id={note.id}
onChange={this.update}>
{note.note}
</Note>)
}
render() {
return (<div className='board'>
{this.state.notes.map(this.eachNote)}
<button onClick={() => this.add()}>+</button>
</div>)
}
}
ReactDOM.render(<Board />,
document.getElementById('root'));
In render(), onClick event has a function, that is, if used in this way: {this.add} the following error is created:
Uncaught Error: Objects are not valid as a React child (found: object with keys {dispatchConfig, _targetInst, nativeEvent, type, target, currentTarget, eventPhase, bubbles, cancelable, timeStamp, defaultPrevented, isTrusted, view, detail, ...})
Why? while in the eachNote() method this command is used:
onChange={this.update}
And there was no error.
Someone can tell me the reason? thanks.
The problem is that in the add function you are taking an argument text and setting it in the state so when you call onClick={() => this.add()}, you are not passing any argument to add function and hence in its definition text is undefned and hence state note is set as undefined.
However if you directly call it like onClick={this.add} , the add function receives the event object as a parameter and hence it sets state note to be an event object which you are using to render
onClick={this.add} will pass the click event to this.add.
So what you need to do is either:
onClick={e => this.add('some text')} or similar.
If you want to onClick={this.add} you have to ensure that your add method is: add(event) { ... } instead.
The <Note /> component does not contain a render() method to return anything. Add a render() method and return something.
class Note extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {editing: false};
this.edit = this.edit.bind(this);
}
edit() {
// alert('edit');
this.setState({editing: !this.state.editing});
}
render() {
return (
<div>Render something</div>
)
}
}
class Board extends React.Component {
constructor(props){
super(props);
this.state = {
notes: []
};
this.update = this.update.bind(this);
this.eachNote = this.eachNote.bind(this);
this.add = this.add.bind(this);
}
nextId() {
this.uniqeId = this.uniqeId || 0;
return this.uniqeId++;
}
add(text) {
let notes = [
...this.state.notes,
{
id: this.nextId(),
note: text
}
];
this.setState({notes});
}
update(newText, id) {
let notes = this.state.notes.map(
note => (note.id !== id) ?
note :
{
id: id,
note: newText
}
);
this.setState({notes})
}
eachNote(note) {
return (<Note key={note.id}
id={note.id}
onChange={this.update}>
{note.note}
</Note>)
}
render() {
return (<div className='board'>
{this.state.notes.map(this.eachNote)}
<button onClick={() => this.add()}>+</button>
</div>)
}
}
ReactDOM.render(<Board />,
document.getElementById('root'));
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.1.0/react.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.1.0/react-dom.js"></script>
<div id="root"></div>
In method render() I call cycle with the children elements with this.state.objects.map(item, id)
conversationTemplate = this.state.objects.map(function (item, index) {
return (
<Panel eventKey={index}>
<h4> {item.msg_text} </h4>
<ReactMessageChat conversationId={item.pk}> {item.pk} </ReactMessageChat>
</Panel>
)
}
When new item appears render reboot, but prop conversationId in child element ReactMessageChat always stays as the first in cycle.
class ReactMessageChat extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
objects: [],
loaded: false,
};
this.addNewMsg = this.addNewMsg.bind(this);
this.subscribe = this.subscribe.bind(this);
}
subscribe() {
return centrifuge;
}
loadDataFromServer(conversationId) {
let self = this;
var url = '/api/support_messages/?msg_conversation=' + conversationId
...
}
addNewMsg(message) {
let self = this;
if (message.msg_conversation == self.props.conversationId) {
var newArray = self.state.objects;
newArray.push(message);
self.setState({objects: newArray});
}
}
componentDidMount() {
this.loadDataFromServer(this.props.conversationId);
this.subscribe();
}
render() {
let self = this;
var messagesTemplate;
if (self.state.objects.length > 0) {
let reversedObjects = self.state.objects.reverse();
messagesTemplate = reversedObjects.map(function (item, index) {
return (
<li className="list-group-item" key={index}>
{item.msg_text}</li>
)
})
}
It happens because of in different methods of cycle you have to give attribute "key" to repetitive element.
https://facebook.github.io/react/docs/lists-and-keys.html
When a user deletes an item from their cart, I have the item displayed with a button to add it back to the cart. This works. Once the user adds the item back to their cart, I want the item in the display component to be removed. Here is my code for reference.
CART:
class Cart extends Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {differences: [],};
}
componentWillReceiveProps(nextProps){
let thisProps = this.props.cart.items;
let theNextProps = nextProps.cart.items;
if (thisProps.map(i => i.sku).some(item => !theNextProps.map(i => i.sku).includes(item))) {
let diff = [thisProps.filter(item => !theNextProps.includes(item))];
this.setState({differences: this.state.differences.concat(diff)});
}
}
...
render = () => {
<CartAddBack data={this.state.differences} onAddToCart={this.props.addToCart} />
<CheckoutSection className='Checkout-cart-items' titleKey='checkout.items.title'>
{this.props.cart.items.map((item) => {
return (
<CheckoutItem item={item} key={item.sku} onRemoveProduct={this.props.removeFromCart} onUpdateQuantity={this.props.updateCartItem}/>
);
})}
</CheckoutSection>
}
}
CartAddBack:
class CartAddBack extends Component {
constructor() {
super();
this.state = {deleted: null};
this.onDelete = this.onDelete.bind(this);
}
onDelete(id){
console.log("THE SKU SHOULD BE HERE", id);
this.setState(id);
}
render() {
let {data} = this.props;
let theData = data.map(i => parseInt(i[0].sku));
let theStated = this.state.deleted;
return (
<div>
{data &&
<div className="CartAddBack">
<div className="CartAddBack-Wrapper">
<ul className="CartAddBack-Item-ul">
{theStated != null
? theData.filter(i => !theStated.includes(i)) &&
<CartAddBackItem data={item[0]} onAddToCart={this.props.onAddToCart} onDelete={this.onDelete}/>
: data.map((item) => {
return <CartAddBackItem data={item[0]} onAddToCart={this.props.onAddToCart} onDelete={this.onDelete}/>
})
}
</ul>
</div>
</div>
}
</div>
)
}
}
CartAddBackItem:
class CartAddBackItem extends Component {
constructor() {
super();
this.onClick = this.onClick.bind(this);
}
onDelete(){
this.props.onDelete({deleted: this.props.data.sku})
}
allowSubmit() {
this.setState({
allowSubmit: true,
});
}
onClick() {
if (this.props.data) {
if (this.props.data.quantity <= this.props.data.inventory_quantity) {
const success = () => {
this.allowSubmit();
},
failure = (err) => {...};
this.props.onAddToCart({
...{sku: this.props.data.sku, quantity: this.props.data.quantity}, quantity: this.props.data.quantity}).then(success, failure);
}
else {
this.setState=({display: false});
const success = () => {
this.allowSubmit();
},
failure = (err) => {...};
this.props.onAddToCart({
...{sku: this.props.data.sku, quantity: this.props.data.quantity}, quantity: 1}).then(success, failure);
}
}
}
render() {
let {data} = this.props;
return (
<li className="CartAddBackItem">
{data &&
<div className="CartAddBackItem-Wrapper">
<Button className="CartAddBackItem-button" onClick={this.onClick}><FormattedMessage id="cart.cartAddBack"/></Button>
<Link to={`product/${data.sku}`} className="CartAddBackItem-Link">
<p className="CartAddBackItem-title">{data.title}</p>
</Link>
</div>
}
</li>
)
}
}
I want CartAddBack to remove CartAddBackItem if the item was clicked in CartAddBackItem. Only thing I havent tried that I just thought about was to make a componentWillReceiveProps inside CartAddBack. But there has to be a better way. Issue I'm running into is my mapping items into CartAddBackItem. The gross looking {theStated != Null ? theData.filter(i =>... allows me to add items to the cart. It works if it was only data.map((item)=>... but I want to show my thinking. Any advice?