Printing all the data from a firebase DB in react - javascript

So I have a firebase DB that looks like this:
I want to know how I can dynamically print every task in its own box with react even if more task are added.

Use a .map function. For example, check out this resource for the docs. I think this is what you're asking for:
https://facebook.github.io/react/docs/lists-and-keys.html
the example below is a simple todo list. I'm pulling the 'todos' object off this.props but that object can be substituted for however you're accessing the return object from firebase.
export class TodoList extends React.Component {
render () {
var {todos, showCompleted, searchText} = this.props;
var filteredTodos = TodoAPI.filterTodos(todos, showCompleted, searchText);
var renderTodos = () => {
if (filteredTodos.length === 0){
return (
<p className="container__message">Nothing To Do</p>
);
}
return filteredTodos.map((todo) => {
return (
<Todo key={todo.id} {...todo}/>
)
});
};
return (
<div>
{renderTodos()}
</div>
)
}
};
export default connect(
(state) => {
return state;
}
)(TodoList);
In this example, I call 'renderTodos()' which first checks if there's any todos and if there is, it uses javascripts .map method to iterate through all the todos returning another component (the individual todos - each individual todo is a component) -- that component displays each todo item. Hope that helps.

Related

React | Adding and deleting object in React Hooks (useState)

How to push element inside useState array AND deleting said object in a dynamic matter using React hooks (useState)?
I'm most likely not googling this issue correctly, but after a lot of research I haven't figured out the issue here, so bare with me on this one.
The situation:
I have a wrapper JSX component which holds my React hook (useState). In this WrapperComponent I have the array state which holds the objects I loop over and generate the child components in the JSX code. I pass down my onChangeUpHandler which gets called every time I want to delete a child component from the array.
Wrapper component:
export const WrapperComponent = ({ component }) => {
// ID for component
const { odmParameter } = component;
const [wrappedComponentsArray, setWrappedComponentsArray] = useState([]);
const deleteChildComponent = (uuid) => {
// Logs to array "before" itsself
console.log(wrappedComponentsArray);
/*
Output: [{"uuid":"acc0d4c-165c-7d70-f8e-d745dd361b5"},
{"uuid":"0ed3cc3-7cd-c647-25db-36ed78b5cbd8"]
*/
setWrappedComponentsArray(prevState => prevState.filter(item => item !== uuid));
// After
console.log(wrappedComponentsArray);
/*
Output: [{"uuid":"acc0d4c-165c-7d70-f8e-d745dd361b5",{"uuid":"0ed3cc3-
7cd-c647-25db-36ed78b5cbd8"]
*/
};
const onChangeUpHandler = (event) => {
const { value } = event;
const { uuid } = event;
switch (value) {
case 'delete':
// This method gets hit
deleteChildComponent(uuid);
break;
default:
break;
}
};
const addOnClick = () => {
const objToAdd = {
// Generate uuid for each component
uuid: uuid(),
onChangeOut: onChangeUpHandler,
};
setWrappedComponentsArray(wrappedComponentsArray => [...wrappedComponentsArray, objToAdd]);
// Have also tried this solution with no success
// setWrappedComponentsArray(wrappedComponentsArray.concat(objToAdd));
};
return (
<>
<div className='page-content'>
{/*Loop over useState array*/}
{
wrappedComponentsArray.length > 0 &&
<div>
{wrappedComponentsArray.map((props) => {
return <div className={'page-item'}>
<ChildComponent {...props} />
</div>;
})
}
</div>
}
{/*Add component btn*/}
{wrappedComponentsArray.length > 0 &&
<div className='page-button-container'>
<ButtonContainer
variant={'secondary'}
label={'Add new component'}
onClick={() => addOnClick()}
/>
</div>
}
</div>
</>
);
};
Child component:
export const ChildComponent = ({ uuid, onChangeOut }) => {
return (
<>
<div className={'row-box-item-wrapper'}>
<div className='row-box-item-input-container row-box-item-header'>
<Button
props={
type: 'delete',
info: 'Deletes the child component',
value: 'Delete',
uuid: uuid,
callback: onChangeOut
}
/>
</div>
<div>
{/* Displays generated uuid in the UI */}
{uuid}
</div>
</div>
</>
)
}
As you can see in my UI my adding logic works as expected (code not showing that the first element in the UI are not showing the delete button):
Here is my problem though:
Say I hit the add button on my WrapperComponent three times and adds three objects in my wrappedComponentsArray gets rendered in the UI via my mapping in the JSX in the WrapperComponent.
Then I hit the delete button on the third component and hit the deleteChildComponent() funtion in my parent component, where I console.log my wrappedComponentsArray from my useState.
The problem then occurs because I get this log:
(2) [{…}, {…}]
even though I know the array has three elements in it, and does not contain the third (and therefore get an undefined, when I try to filter it out, via the UUID key.
How do I solve this issue? Hope my code and explanation makes sense, and sorry if this question has already been posted, which I suspect it has.
You provided bad filter inside deleteChildComponent, rewrite to this:
setWrappedComponentsArray(prevState => prevState.filter(item => item.uuid !== uuid));
You did item !== uuid, instead of item.uuid !== uuid
Please try this, i hope this works
const deleteChildComponent = (uuid) => {
console.log(wrappedComponentsArray);
setWrappedComponentsArray(wrappedComponentsArray.filter(item => item !== uuid));
};
After update
const deleteChildComponent = (uuid) => {
console.log(wrappedComponentsArray);
setWrappedComponentsArray(wrappedComponentsArray.filter(item => item.uuid !== uuid)); // item replaced to item.uuid
};
Huge shoutout to #Jay Vaghasiya for the help.
Thanks to his expertise we managed to find the solution.
First of, I wasn't passing the uuid reference properly. The correct was, when making the objects, and pushing them to the array, we passed the uuid like this:
const addOnClick = () => {
const objToAdd = {
// Generate uuid for each component
uuid: uuid(),
parentOdmParameter: odmParameter,
onChangeOut: function(el) { onChangeUpHandler(el, this.uuid)}
};
setWrappedComponentsArray([...wrappedComponentsArray, objToAdd]);
};
When calling to delete function the function that worked for us, was the following:
const deleteChildComponent = (uuid) => {
setWrappedComponentsArray(item => item.filter(__item => __item.uuid !== uuid)); // item replaced to item.uuid
};

React - How to re-render a component using another component?

I have a NavBar component that has a list of dynamically generated links (these links are generated after querying my backend for some categories). These links are stored inside a child component of the NavBar, called DrawerMenu.
The NavBar is a child of the main App.js component.
In my Category component, I have a "delete" function that deletes a category. Once I delete a category I want to remove the link to it in the NavBar. How would I go about doing this?
For further context, my components are given below:
DrawerMenu component
class DrawerMenu extends Component {
state = {
menuItems: [] // Takes a series of objects of the shape { name: "", link: "" }
}
getData = (query) => {
// Query backend for category data and set it to this.state.menuItems
}
componentDidMount() {
this.getData(menuItemsQuery)
}
render() {
const { classes, handleDrawerClose, open } = this.props
const { menuItems } = this.state
const drawer = (classes, handleDrawerClose) => (
<div>
...
{
menuItems.map((menuItem, index) => (
<Link color="inherit" key={index} to={menuItem.link} className={classes.drawerLink} component={RouterLink}>
<ListItem button className={classes.drawerListItem} onClick={handleDrawerClose}>
<ListItemText primary={menuItem.name} />
</ListItem>
</Link>
))
}
...
</div>
)
...
return (
<div>
<Drawer
variant="temporary"
anchor='left'
open={open}
onClose={handleDrawerClose}
classes={{
paper: `${open ? classes.drawerOpen : null} ${!open ? classes.drawerClose : null}`,
}}
ModalProps={{
keepMounted: true, // Better open performance on mobile.
}}
>
{drawer(classes, handleDrawerClose)}
</Drawer>
</div>
)
}
}
NavBar component
function PrimarySearchAppBar(props) {
return (
<div className={classes.grow}>
...
<DrawerMenu
classes={classes}
handleDrawerClose={handleDrawerClose}
open={open}
/>
...
</div>
)
}
Category component
class Category extends Component {
...
deleteCategory = async () => {
// Code to request backend to delete category
this.props.history.push(`/`)
}
...
}
There are two common ways of doing this: You can either use a state management tool, like Redux or pass your state down the component tree as props.
Redux is often used when several components depend on the same state or when the component that depends on a state is several layers deep, so it would get cumbersome to pass it down as props.
I'll assume your component tree is not very large, so I will create a simple example passing props down the tree.
class DrawerMenu extends Component {
// We're gonna manage the state here, so the deletion
// will actually be handled by this component
state = {
menuItems: [] // Takes a series of objects of the shape { name: "", link: "" }
}
handleDelete = (id) => {
let updatedMenuItem = [...this.state.menuItems]; //Create a copy
updatedMenuItem = updatedMenuItem(item => item.id !== id) // Remove the
deleted item
this.setState({
menuItems: updatedMenuItem
})
}
...
// Then wherever you render the category component
<Category handleDelete = {handleDelete}/> //Pass a reference to the delete method
}
Category Component
class Category extends Component {
...
deleteCategory = async () => {
// Code to request backend to delete category
this.props.handleDelete(categoryId) //Pass the id of the category
this.props.history.push(`/`)
}
...
}
I would suggest reading about state management, it is a core concept in React and you will use it everywhere. Redux and Context API for example.
Not sure why Dennis Vash deleted their answer, they are correct, but perhaps not descriptive enough in the solution.
The way you delete the category is not to call the backend itself from inside the category component, because then the navbar doesn't know that you made a call, but to call a callback that is in an ancestor shared by both the category component and the navbar to delete a category, and then rerequest the categories list from the server. In the example below, this ancestor that is shared is MyCategoriesProvider
Because the category component is likely to be in a much different place (or multiple places) in the tree than the NavBar, it's best to use context.
Honestly, this is a great place for redux, but I'm not going to push redux on you and instead will just demo a Context solution.
// We're going to create a context that will manage your categories
// The only job of this context is to hold the current categories,
// and supply the updating functions. For brevity, I'll just give
// it a handleDelete function.
// Ideally, you'd also store the status of the request in this context
// as well so you could show loaders in the app, etc
import { createContext } from 'react';
// export this, we'll be using it later
export const CategoriesContext = createContext();
// export this, we'll render it high up in the app
// it will only accept children
export const MyCategoriesProvider = ({children}) => {
// here we can add a status flag in case we wanted to show a spinner
// somewhere down in your app
const [isRequestingCategories,setIsRequestingCategories] = useState(false);
// this is your list of categories that you got from the server
// we'll start with an empty array
const [categories,setCategories] = useState([]);
const fetch = async () => {
setIsRequestingCategories(true);
setCategories(await apiCallToFetchCategories());
setIsRequestingCategories(false);
}
const handleDelete = async category => {
await apiCallToDeleteCategory(category);
// we deleted a category, so we should re-request the list from the server
fetch();
}
useEffect(() => {
// when this component mounts, fetch the categories immediately
fetch();
// feel free to ignore any warnings if you're using a linter about rules of hooks here - this is 100% a "componentDidMount" hook and doesn't have any dependencies
},[]);
return <CategoriesContext.Provider value={{categories,isRequestingCategories,handleDelete}}>{children}</CategoriesContext.Provider>
}
// And you use it like this:
const App = () => {
return (
<MyCategoriesProvider>
<SomeOtherComponent>
<SomeOtherComponent> <- let's say your PrimarySearchBar is in here somewhere
<SomeOtherComponent>
</MyCategoriesProvider>
)
}
// in PrimarySearchBar you'd do this:
function PrimarySearchBar(props) => {
const {categories} = useContext(CategoriesContext); // you exported this above, remember?
// pass it as a prop to navbar, you could easily put the useContext hook inside of any component
return <NavBar categories={categories}/>
}
// in your category component you could do this:
class Category extends Component {
render() {
// Don't forget, categoriesContext is the thing you exported way up at the top
<CategoriesContext.Consumer>
{({handleDelete}) => {
return <button onClick={() => handleDelete(this.props.category)}>
}}
</CategoriesContext.Consumer>
}
}
EDIT:
I see you're mixing class and functional components, which is fine. You should check out this article on how to use the context api in either of them - in functional components you typically use a useContext hook, while in class components you'll use a consumer.
I would just refresh the list of categories that come from the server, after the delete request is done.
I'd do it as follows:
I would make the drawer component not so smart, making it receive the list of menuItems.
<DrawerMenu
classes={classes}
handleDrawerClose={handleDrawerClose}
open={open}
items={/* ... */}
/>
This is an important step, because now, to refresh the list of items rendered, you just pass another list. The server-side logic remains disconnected from this component in this way.
I'm not sure where you render the Category components, but supposing it is rendered outside the PrimarySearchAppBar it seems that this menuItems might need to be passed to the components from an upper level. I see 2 solutions:
I'd do the request for the menuItems from the same place where I do the request for the categories:
const App = props => {
const [categories, setCategories] = React.useState([])
const [menuItems, setMenuItems] = React.useState([])
const fetchCategories = useCallback(()=> {
yourApi.getCategories().then(categories => setCategories(categories))
})
const fetchMenuItems = useCallback(() => {
yourApi.getMenuItems().then(menuItems => setMenuItems(menuItems))
})
useEffect(() => {
fetchCategories()
}, [])
useEffect(() => {
fetchMenuItems()
}, [categories])
const handleDeleteCategory = useCallback(idToDelete => {
yourApi.deleteCategory(idToDelete).then(fetchCategories)
})
return (
<div>
<PrimarySearchAppBar menuItems={menuItems}/>
<Categories categories={categories} onDeleteClick={handleDeleteCategory} />
</div>
)
}
you can do the same thing but do it with a provider and using the content API if you do not want to have all the logic here. It is good to have smart/fetches/server-side logic in a top level component and then pass down props to dumb components.
PS.
There is also a nice hook to make fetches easier:
https://github.com/doasync/use-promise
I currently use a custom version of a usePromise hook I found because I added some interesting features. I can share it if you want but I don't want to add noise to the answer.

Adding child elements dynamically in React (state array)

I am working to build a Pokedex from JSON data in React. I am refactoring this project from one I built in jQuery, so it could be that the jQuery approach is causing me to misunderstand how to approach this problem with proper React thinking. What's tripping me up so far is how to dynamically render multiple child elements based on the JSON I pass from a the parent element (this would be jQuery append).
Here is my App.js code:
class App extends Component {
render() {
return (
<div className="App background">
<div className="content">
<Header />
<TilesContainer pokedexName="national"/>
</div>
</div>
);
}
The TilesContainer essentially receives the name of a Pokedex and makes a call to an API. The individual Pokemon names are stored in an array in the TilesContainer state (this.state.pokemon), as below.
class TilesContainer extends Component {
constructor(props){
super(props);
this.state = {pokemon: []};
this.getPokemon = this.getPokemon.bind(this);
this.tiles = this.tiles.bind(this);
}
getPokemon() {
// set this.state.pokemon to the list
let link = 'https://pokeapi.co/api/v2/pokedex/' + this.props.pokedexName + '/';
fetch(link)
.then(response => response.json())
.then(myJson => {
let list = myJson['pokemon_entries'];
list.forEach(pokemon => {
this.state.pokemon.push(pokemon);
})
})
this.tiles();
}
tiles() {
if (this.state.pokemon.length > 0) {
return (
this.state.pokemon.map(pokemon => {
<Tile number={pokemon.entry_number}/>
})
)
}
}
render(){
this.getPokemon();
return (
<div id="tiles-container"
className="tiles-container">
<h1>TilesContainer Test</h1>
<Tile number={1} />
</div>
)
}
}
export default TilesContainer
Again, the idea is that a Pokemon tile is render for each Pokemon in the Pokedex JSON (which for now I've stored in this.state.pokemon - not sure if this is the best approach). I found an example here on Stack Overflow that uses an additional function (this this case this.tiles() to generate what I think is an array of returns with different child elements). The <Tile number={1} /> is a hardcoded example of how the tile is called.
Currently no dynamically-rendered tiles show up when the code runs. Is this the correct approach. I'd really appreciate any suggestions.
Thanks!
It looks like you're almost there.
First off, never modify state directly. Use this.setState() instead. State in React is updated asynchronously. For your purposes, you should be able to modify getPokemon() like the following. I also removed the this.tiles() call, as it is unnecessary.
getPokemon() {
// set this.state.pokemon to the list
let link = 'https://pokeapi.co/api/v2/pokedex/' + this.props.pokedexName + '/';
fetch(link)
.then(response => response.json())
.then(myJson => {
let list = myJson['pokemon_entries'];
this.setState({
pokemon: list,
});
})
}
A minor correction for tiles(): when using an arrow function and returning something in one line, use parentheses instead of curly braces. When you use curly braces, you have to include a return statement. With parentheses, you do not.
tiles() {
if (this.state.pokemon.length > 0) {
return (
this.state.pokemon.map(pokemon => (
<Tile number={pokemon.entry_number}/>
))
)
}
}
Next, since tiles() returns your dynamic tile components, it needs to be included in what you return in render().
render(){
return (
<div id="tiles-container"
className="tiles-container"
>
<h1>TilesContainer Test</h1>
{this.tiles()}
</div>
)
}
Lastly, I think the call to this.getPokemon() would make more sense in the constructor, rather than in render().
I think your method of getting the json data and storing it in state is fine, by the way. In the future, you may want to look into Redux to manage your state, but it could be overkill for a really small application.
so you are passing the pokedexName from the parent component which is app.js, once you get the props you can call the rest api call on the componentWillMount life cycle.
so on the render since the api call has been initiated it wont have any data thats why we are using a ternary operator to check the array once the api call get finished and we get the data we are setting the data to the pokemon array.
Since the state is updated react will automatically render a re render so the data will appear.
i hope the below code will solve the issue, please let me know :)
// App.js
import React, { Component } from 'react';
import TilesContainer from './components/TileContainer/TilesContainer'
class App extends Component {
render() {
return (
<div>
<TilesContainer pokedexName="national" />
</div>
);
}
}
export default App;
// Tiles container
import React, {Component} from 'react';
import axios from 'axios';
class TilesContainer extends Component{
//state
state ={
pokemon: []
}
// life cycle methods
componentWillMount(){
let link = 'https://pokeapi.co/api/v2/pokedex/' + this.props.pokedexName + '/';
axios.get(link)
.then(res => {
this.setState({
pokemon: res.data["pokemon_entries"]
})
})
}
render(){
let style ={display:"inline"}
return(
<div>
{
this.state.pokemon.length > 0 ?
this.state.pokemon.map(pokemon => {
return(
<div key={pokemon.entry_number}>
<p style={style}>{pokemon.entry_number}</p>
<a href={pokemon.pokemon_species.url}>{pokemon.pokemon_species.name}</a>
</div>
)
})
:
null
}
</div>
)
}
}
export default TilesContainer

How to automatically run a function after a page loads in react?

In my componentDidMount(), I am calling an actionCreator in my redux file to do an API call to get a list of items. This list of items is then added into the redux store which I can access from my component via mapStateToProps.
const mapStateToProps = state => {
return {
list: state.list
};
};
So in my render(), I have:
render() {
const { list } = this.props;
}
Now, when the page loads, I need to run a function that needs to map over this list.
Let's say I have this method:
someFunction(list) {
// A function that makes use of list
}
But where do I call it? I must call it when the list is already available to me as my function will give me an error the list is undefined (if it's not yet available).
I also cannot invoke it in render (before the return statement) as it gives me an error that render() must be pure.
Is there another lifecycle method that I can use?
Just do this, and in redux store please make sure that initial state of list should be []
const mapStateToProps = state => {
return {
list: someFunction(state.list)
};
};
These are two ways you can play with received props from Redux
Do it in render
render() {
const { list } = this.props;
const items = list && list.map((item, index) => {
return <li key={item.id}>{item.value}</li>
});
return(
<div>
{items}
</div>
);
}
Or Do it in componentWillReceiveProps method if you are not using react 16.3 or greater
this.state = {
items: []
}
componentWillReceiveProps(nextProps){
if(nextProps.list != this.props.list){
const items = nextProps.list && nextProps.list.map((item, index) => {
return <li key={item.id}>{item.value}</li>
});
this.setState({items: items});
}
}
render() {
const {items} = this.state;
return(
<div>
{items}
</div>
);
}
You can also do it in componentDidMount if your Api call is placed in componentWillMount or receiving props from parent.

Passing received value from onClick events across different components

Let's say we got two different React components. One contains reports with dates, the other should show employees that worked that particular month.
So depending on what reports month was clicked, I need to be able to show those employees, but in a second component.
I'm able to get the date that was clicked in the first one but in order to know which employees to show I need to compare that data (from the 1st component) with employees data (second component).
The big question here is - HOW CAN I TRANSFER THAT NEWLY CONSTRUCTED (onClick - Custom function)EVENTS DATA TO THAT SECOND COMPONENT SO I CAN COMPARE THEM ??
You can create a "Parent" component which will render your two components.
The Parent component will have the selected date in the state.
class Parent extends Component {
constructor() {
this.handleDateChange = this.handleDateChange.bind(this);
this.state = { date: null };
}
handleDataChange(date) {
this.setState({ date });
}
render() {
return (
<div>
<Component1 onDateChange={this.handeDataChange} />
<Component2 date={this.state.date} />
</div>
);
}
}
You have to update your Component1 to receive onDateChange, and you have to call that function when the date is updated:
// where the date is updated
this.props.onDateChange(newDate);
Also you have to update your Component2 to receive date (the selected date) which you can use to filter your employees:
// maybe in the render function... you will know the selected date with this.props.date. For example you could do something like this:
const filtered = this.employees.filter(employee => employee.date === this.props.date);
How does this work?
when you select your date in your first component, it will call handleDateChange
... It will update Parent's state
... then Parent's render function will be called (because the state changed)
... then it will pass the new date (stored in the state) to the second component.
Contain the component within a common parent component that's then able to act as a broker for the relevant data.
Often, several components need to reflect the same changing data. We recommend lifting the shared state up to their closest common ancestor.
[From: lifting state up]
This is simplified but something like:
class Employees extends Component {
state = {
employees: []
}
async componentDidMount() {
const { clickedDate } = this.props
const employees = await fetchEmployees(clickedDate) // or whatever
this.setState({ employees })
}
render() {
const { employees } = this.state
if (employees.length === 0) {
return
<p>Loading...</p>
}
return (
<div className='employees'>
{
employees.map(employee => (
<p>{employee}</p>
))
}
</div>
)
}
}
const Reports = ({ dates, setClickedDate }) => (
<div className='reports'>
{
dates.map(date => (
<p onClick={() => setClickedDate(date)}>{date}</p>
))
}
</div>
)
class Parent extends Component {
state = {
clickedDate: undefined,
dates: ['dates', 'from', 'somewhere']
}
setClickedDate = clickedDate => this.setState({ clickedDate })
render() {
const { clickedDate } = this.state
return [
<Reports dates={dates} setClickedDate={this.setClickedDate} />,
<Employees clickedDate={clickedDate} />
]
}
}

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