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The smallest React example looks like this:
const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root'));
root.render(<h1>Hello, world!</h1>);
It displays a heading saying “Hello, world!” on the page.
Click the link above to open an online editor. Feel free to make some changes, and see how they affect the output. Most pages in this guide will have editable examples like this one.
In this guide, we will examine the building blocks of React apps: elements and components. Once you master them, you can create complex apps from small reusable pieces.
Tip
This guide is designed for people who prefer learning concepts step by step . If you prefer to learn by doing, check out our practical tutorial. You might find this guide and the tutorial complementary to each other.
This is the first chapter in a step-by-step guide about main React concepts. You can find a list of all its chapters in the navigation sidebar. If you’re reading this from a mobile device, you can access the navigation by pressing the button in the bottom right corner of your screen.
Every chapter in this guide builds on the knowledge introduced in earlier chapters. You can learn most of React by reading the “Main Concepts” guide chapters in the order they appear in the sidebar. For example, “Introducing JSX” is the next chapter after this one.
React is a JavaScript library, and so we’ll assume you have a basic understanding of the JavaScript language. If you don’t feel very confident, we recommend going through a JavaScript tutorial to check your knowledge level and enable you to follow along this guide without getting lost. It might take you between 30 minutes and an hour, but as a result you won’t have to feel like you’re learning both React and JavaScript at the same time.
Note
This guide occasionally uses some newer JavaScript syntax in the examples. If you haven’t worked with JavaScript in the last few years, these three points should get you most of the way.
Keep scrolling down, and you’ll find the link to the next chapter of this guide right before the website footer.
Consider this variable declaration:
const element = <h1>Hello, world!</h1>;
This funny tag syntax is neither a string nor HTML.
It is called JSX, and it is a syntax extension to JavaScript. We recommend using it with React to describe what the UI should look like. JSX may remind you of a template language, but it comes with the full power of JavaScript.
JSX produces React “elements”. We will explore rendering them to the DOM in the next section. Below, you can find the basics of JSX necessary to get you started.
React embraces the fact that rendering logic is inherently coupled with other UI logic: how events are handled, how the state changes over time, and how the data is prepared for display.
Instead of artificially separating technologies by putting markup and logic in separate files, React separates concerns with loosely coupled units called “components” that contain both. We will come back to components in a further section, but if you’re not yet comfortable putting markup in JS, this talk might convince you otherwise.
React doesn’t require using JSX, but most people find it helpful as a visual aid when working with UI inside the JavaScript code. It also allows React to show more useful error and warning messages.
With that out of the way, let’s get started!
In the example below, we declare a variable called
name
and then use it inside JSX by wrapping it in curly braces:
const name = 'Josh Perez';const element = <h1>Hello, {name}</h1>;
You can put any valid JavaScript expression inside the curly braces in JSX. For example,
2 + 2
,
user.firstName
, or
formatName(user)
are all valid JavaScript expressions.
In the example below, we embed the result of calling a JavaScript function,
formatName(user)
, into an
<h1>
element.
function formatName(user) {
return user.firstName + ' ' + user.lastName;
}
const user = {
firstName: 'Harper',
lastName: 'Perez'
};
const element = (
<h1>
Hello, {formatName(user)}! </h1>
);
Try it on CodePen
We split JSX over multiple lines for readability. While it isn’t required, when doing this, we also recommend wrapping it in parentheses to avoid the pitfalls of automatic semicolon insertion.
After compilation, JSX expressions become regular JavaScript function calls and evaluate to JavaScript objects.
This means that you can use JSX inside of
if
statements and
for
loops, assign it to variables, accept it as arguments, and return it from functions:
function getGreeting(user) {
if (user) {
return <h1>Hello, {formatName(user)}!</h1>; }
return <h1>Hello, Stranger.</h1>;}
You may use quotes to specify string literals as attributes:
const element = <a href="https://www.reactjs.org"> link </a>;
You may also use curly braces to embed a JavaScript expression in an attribute:
const element = <img src={user.avatarUrl}></img>;
Don’t put quotes around curly braces when embedding a JavaScript expression in an attribute. You should either use quotes (for string values) or curly braces (for expressions), but not both in the same attribute.
Warning:
Since JSX is closer to JavaScript than to HTML, React DOM uses
camelCase
property naming convention instead of HTML attribute names.
For example,
class
becomesclassName
in JSX, andtabindex
becomestabIndex
.
If a tag is empty, you may close it immediately with
/>
, like XML:
const element = <img src={user.avatarUrl} />;
JSX tags may contain children:
const element = (
<div>
<h1>Hello!</h1>
<h2>Good to see you here.</h2>
</div>
);
It is safe to embed user input in JSX:
const title = response.potentiallyMaliciousInput;
// This is safe:
const element = <h1>{title}</h1>;
By default, React DOM escapes any values embedded in JSX before rendering them. Thus it ensures that you can never inject anything that’s not explicitly written in your application. Everything is converted to a string before being rendered. This helps prevent XSS (cross-site-scripting) attacks.
Babel compiles JSX down to
React.createElement()
calls.
These two examples are identical:
const element = (
<h1 className="greeting">
Hello, world!
</h1>
);
const element = React.createElement(
'h1',
{className: 'greeting'},
'Hello, world!'
);
React.createElement()
performs a few checks to help you write bug-free code but essentially it creates an object like this:
// Note: this structure is simplified
const element = {
type: 'h1',
props: {
className: 'greeting',
children: 'Hello, world!'
}
};
These objects are called “React elements”. You can think of them as descriptions of what you want to see on the screen. React reads these objects and uses them to construct the DOM and keep it up to date.
We will explore rendering React elements to the DOM in the next section.
Tip:
We recommend using the “Babel” language definition for your editor of choice so that both ES6 and JSX code is properly highlighted.
Elements are the smallest building blocks of React apps.
An element describes what you want to see on the screen:
const element = <h1>Hello, world</h1>;
Unlike browser DOM elements, React elements are plain objects, and are cheap to create. React DOM takes care of updating the DOM to match the React elements.
Note:
One might confuse elements with a more widely known concept of “components”. We will introduce components in the next section. Elements are what components are “made of”, and we encourage you to read this section before jumping ahead.
Let’s say there is a
<div>
somewhere in your HTML file:
<div id="root"></div>
We call this a “root” DOM node because everything inside it will be managed by React DOM.
Applications built with just React usually have a single root DOM node. If you are integrating React into an existing app, you may have as many isolated root DOM nodes as you like.
To render a React element, first pass the DOM element to
ReactDOM.createRoot()
, then pass the React element to
root.render()
:
const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(
document.getElementById('root')
);
const element = <h1>Hello, world</h1>;
root.render(element);
Try it on CodePen
It displays “Hello, world” on the page.
React elements are immutable. Once you create an element, you can’t change its children or attributes. An element is like a single frame in a movie: it represents the UI at a certain point in time.
With our knowledge so far, the only way to update the UI is to create a new element, and pass it to
root.render()
.
Consider this ticking clock example:
const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(
document.getElementById('root')
);
function tick() {
const element = (
<div>
<h1>Hello, world!</h1>
<h2>It is {new Date().toLocaleTimeString()}.</h2>
</div>
);
root.render(element);}
setInterval(tick, 1000);
Try it on CodePen
It calls
root.render()
every second from a
setInterval()
callback.
Note:
In practice, most React apps only call
root.render()
once. In the next sections we will learn how such code gets encapsulated into stateful components.
We recommend that you don’t skip topics because they build on each other.
React DOM compares the element and its children to the previous one, and only applies the DOM updates necessary to bring the DOM to the desired state.
You can verify by inspecting the last example with the browser tools:
Even though we create an element describing the whole UI tree on every tick, only the text node whose contents have changed gets updated by React DOM.
In our experience, thinking about how the UI should look at any given moment, rather than how to change it over time, eliminates a whole class of bugs.
Components let you split the UI into independent, reusable pieces, and think about each piece in isolation. This page provides an introduction to the idea of components. You can find a detailed component API reference here.
Conceptually, components are like JavaScript functions. They accept arbitrary inputs (called “props”) and return React elements describing what should appear on the screen.
The simplest way to define a component is to write a JavaScript function:
function Welcome(props) {
return <h1>Hello, {props.name}</h1>;
}
This function is a valid React component because it accepts a single “props” (which stands for properties) object argument with data and returns a React element. We call such components “function components” because they are literally JavaScript functions.
You can also use an ES6 class to define a component:
class Welcome extends React.Component {
render() {
return <h1>Hello, {this.props.name}</h1>;
}
}
The above two components are equivalent from React’s point of view.
Function and Class components both have some additional features that we will discuss in the next sections.
Previously, we only encountered React elements that represent DOM tags:
const element = <div />;
However, elements can also represent user-defined components:
const element = <Welcome name="Sara" />;
When React sees an element representing a user-defined component, it passes JSX attributes and children to this component as a single object. We call this object “props”.
For example, this code renders “Hello, Sara” on the page:
function Welcome(props) { return <h1>Hello, {props.name}</h1>;
}
const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root'));
const element = <Welcome name="Sara" />;root.render(element);
Try it on CodePen
Let’s recap what happens in this example:
root.render()
with the
<Welcome name="Sara" />
element.
Welcome
component with
{name: 'Sara'}
as the props.
Welcome
component returns a
<h1>Hello, Sara</h1>
element as the result.
<h1>Hello, Sara</h1>
.
Note: Always start component names with a capital letter.
React treats components starting with lowercase letters as DOM tags. For example,
<div />
represents an HTML div tag, but<Welcome />
represents a component and requiresWelcome
to be in scope.
To learn more about the reasoning behind this convention, please read JSX In Depth.
Components can refer to other components in their output. This lets us use the same component abstraction for any level of detail. A button, a form, a dialog, a screen: in React apps, all those are commonly expressed as components.
For example, we can create an
App
component that renders
Welcome
many times:
function Welcome(props) {
return <h1>Hello, {props.name}</h1>;
}
function App() {
return (
<div>
<Welcome name="Sara" /> <Welcome name="Cahal" /> <Welcome name="Edite" /> </div>
);
}
Try it on CodePen
Typically, new React apps have a single
App
component at the very top. However, if you integrate React into an existing app, you might start bottom-up with a small component like
Button
and gradually work your way to the top of the view hierarchy.
Don’t be afraid to split components into smaller components.
For example, consider this
Comment
component:
function Comment(props) {
return (
<div className="Comment">
<div className="UserInfo">
<img className="Avatar"
src={props.author.avatarUrl}
alt={props.author.name}
/>
<div className="UserInfo-name">
{props.author.name}
</div>
</div>
<div className="Comment-text">
{props.text}
</div>
<div className="Comment-date">
{formatDate(props.date)}
</div>
</div>
);
}
Try it on CodePen
It accepts
author
(an object),
text
(a string), and
date
(a date) as props, and describes a comment on a social media website.
This component can be tricky to change because of all the nesting, and it is also hard to reuse individual parts of it. Let’s extract a few components from it.
First, we will extract
Avatar
:
function Avatar(props) {
return (
<img className="Avatar" src={props.user.avatarUrl} alt={props.user.name} /> );
}
The
Avatar
doesn’t need to know that it is being rendered inside a
Comment
. This is why we have given its prop a more generic name:
user
rather than
author
.
We recommend naming props from the component’s own point of view rather than the context in which it is being used.
We can now simplify
Comment
a tiny bit:
function Comment(props) {
return (
<div className="Comment">
<div className="UserInfo">
<Avatar user={props.author} /> <div className="UserInfo-name">
{props.author.name}
</div>
</div>
<div className="Comment-text">
{props.text}
</div>
<div className="Comment-date">
{formatDate(props.date)}
</div>
</div>
);
}
Next, we will extract a
UserInfo
component that renders an
Avatar
next to the user’s name:
function UserInfo(props) {
return (
<div className="UserInfo"> <Avatar user={props.user} /> <div className="UserInfo-name"> {props.user.name} </div> </div> );
}
This lets us simplify
Comment
even further:
function Comment(props) {
return (
<div className="Comment">
<UserInfo user={props.author} /> <div className="Comment-text">
{props.text}
</div>
<div className="Comment-date">
{formatDate(props.date)}
</div>
</div>
);
}
Try it on CodePen
Extracting components might seem like grunt work at first, but having a palette of reusable components pays off in larger apps. A good rule of thumb is that if a part of your UI is used several times (
Button
,
Panel
,
Avatar
), or is complex enough on its own (
App
,
FeedStory
,
Comment
), it is a good candidate to be extracted to a separate component.
Whether you declare a component as a function or a class, it must never modify its own props. Consider this
sum
function:
function sum(a, b) {
return a + b;
}
Such functions are called “pure” because they do not attempt to change their inputs, and always return the same result for the same inputs.
In contrast, this function is impure because it changes its own input:
function withdraw(account, amount) {
account.total -= amount;
}
React is pretty flexible but it has a single strict rule:
All React components must act like pure functions with respect to their props.
Of course, application UIs are dynamic and change over time. In the next section, we will introduce a new concept of “state”. State allows React components to change their output over time in response to user actions, network responses, and anything else, without violating this rule.
This page introduces the concept of state and lifecycle in a React component. You can find a detailed component API reference here.
Consider the ticking clock example from one of the previous sections. In Rendering Elements, we have only learned one way to update the UI. We call
root.render()
to change the rendered output:
const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root'));
function tick() {
const element = (
<div>
<h1>Hello, world!</h1>
<h2>It is {new Date().toLocaleTimeString()}.</h2>
</div>
);
root.render(element);}
setInterval(tick, 1000);
Try it on CodePen
In this section, we will learn how to make the
Clock
component truly reusable and encapsulated. It will set up its own timer and update itself every second.
We can start by encapsulating how the clock looks:
const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root'));
function Clock(props) {
return (
<div> <h1>Hello, world!</h1> <h2>It is {props.date.toLocaleTimeString()}.</h2> </div> );
}
function tick() {
root.render(<Clock date={new Date()} />);}
setInterval(tick, 1000);
Try it on CodePen
However, it misses a crucial requirement: the fact that the
Clock
sets up a timer and updates the UI every second should be an implementation detail of the
Clock
.
Ideally we want to write this once and have the
Clock
update itself:
root.render(<Clock />);
To implement this, we need to add “state” to the
Clock
component.
State is similar to props, but it is private and fully controlled by the component.
You can convert a function component like
Clock
to a class in five steps:
React.Component
.
render()
.
render()
method.
props
with
this.props
in the
render()
body.
class Clock extends React.Component {
render() {
return (
<div>
<h1>Hello, world!</h1>
<h2>It is {this.props.date.toLocaleTimeString()}.</h2>
</div>
);
}
}
Try it on CodePen
Clock
is now defined as a class rather than a function.
The
render
method will be called each time an update happens, but as long as we render
<Clock />
into the same DOM node, only a single instance of the
Clock
class will be used. This lets us use additional features such as local state and lifecycle methods.
We will move the
date
from props to state in three steps:
this.props.date
with
this.state.date
in the
render()
method:
class Clock extends React.Component {
render() {
return (
<div>
<h1>Hello, world!</h1>
<h2>It is {this.state.date.toLocaleTimeString()}.</h2> </div>
);
}
}
this.state
:
class Clock extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {date: new Date()}; }
render() {
return (
<div>
<h1>Hello, world!</h1>
<h2>It is {this.state.date.toLocaleTimeString()}.</h2>
</div>
);
}
}
Note how we pass
props
to the base constructor:
constructor(props) {
super(props); this.state = {date: new Date()};
}
Class components should always call the base constructor with
props
.
date
prop from the
<Clock />
element:
root.render(<Clock />);
We will later add the timer code back to the component itself.
The result looks like this:
class Clock extends React.Component {
constructor(props) { super(props); this.state = {date: new Date()}; }
render() {
return (
<div>
<h1>Hello, world!</h1>
<h2>It is {this.state.date.toLocaleTimeString()}.</h2> </div>
);
}
}
const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root'));
root.render(<Clock />);
Try it on CodePen
Next, we’ll make the
Clock
set up its own timer and update itself every second.
In applications with many components, it’s very important to free up resources taken by the components when they are destroyed.
We want to set up a timer whenever the
Clock
is rendered to the DOM for the first time. This is called “mounting” in React.
We also want to clear that timer whenever the DOM produced by the
Clock
is removed. This is called “unmounting” in React.
We can declare special methods on the component class to run some code when a component mounts and unmounts:
class Clock extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {date: new Date()};
}
componentDidMount() { }
componentWillUnmount() { }
render() {
return (
<div>
<h1>Hello, world!</h1>
<h2>It is {this.state.date.toLocaleTimeString()}.</h2>
</div>
);
}
}
These methods are called “lifecycle methods”.
The
componentDidMount()
method runs after the component output has been rendered to the DOM. This is a good place to set up a timer:
componentDidMount() {
this.timerID = setInterval( () => this.tick(), 1000 ); }
Note how we save the timer ID right on
this
(
this.timerID
).
While
this.props
is set up by React itself and
this.state
has a special meaning, you are free to add additional fields to the class manually if you need to store something that doesn’t participate in the data flow (like a timer ID).
We will tear down the timer in the
componentWillUnmount()
lifecycle method:
componentWillUnmount() {
clearInterval(this.timerID); }
Finally, we will implement a method called
tick()
that the
Clock
component will run every second.
It will use
this.setState()
to schedule updates to the component local state:
class Clock extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {date: new Date()};
}
componentDidMount() {
this.timerID = setInterval(
() => this.tick(),
1000
);
}
componentWillUnmount() {
clearInterval(this.timerID);
}
tick() { this.setState({ date: new Date() }); }
render() {
return (
<div>
<h1>Hello, world!</h1>
<h2>It is {this.state.date.toLocaleTimeString()}.</h2>
</div>
);
}
}
const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root'));
root.render(<Clock />);
Try it on CodePen
Now the clock ticks every second.
Let’s quickly recap what’s going on and the order in which the methods are called:
<Clock />
is passed to
root.render()
, React calls the constructor of the
Clock
component. Since
Clock
needs to display the current time, it initializes
this.state
with an object including the current time. We will later update this state.
Clock
component’s
render()
method. This is how React learns what should be displayed on the screen. React then updates the DOM to match the
Clock
’s render output.
Clock
output is inserted in the DOM, React calls the
componentDidMount()
lifecycle method. Inside it, the
Clock
component asks the browser to set up a timer to call the component’s
tick()
method once a second.
tick()
method. Inside it, the
Clock
component schedules a UI update by calling
setState()
with an object containing the current time. Thanks to the
setState()
call, React knows the state has changed, and calls the
render()
method again to learn what should be on the screen. This time,
this.state.date
in the
render()
method will be different, and so the render output will include the updated time. React updates the DOM accordingly.
Clock
component is ever removed from the DOM, React calls the
componentWillUnmount()
lifecycle method so the timer is stopped.
There are three things you should know about
setState()
.
For example, this will not re-render a component:
// Wrong
this.state.comment = 'Hello';
Instead, use
setState()
:
// Correct
this.setState({comment: 'Hello'});
The only place where you can assign
this.state
is the constructor.
React may batch multiple
setState()
calls into a single update for performance.
Because
this.props
and
this.state
may be updated asynchronously, you should not rely on their values for calculating the next state.
For example, this code may fail to update the counter:
// Wrong
this.setState({
counter: this.state.counter + this.props.increment,
});
To fix it, use a second form of
setState()
that accepts a function rather than an object. That function will receive the previous state as the first argument, and the props at the time the update is applied as the second argument:
// Correct
this.setState((state, props) => ({
counter: state.counter + props.increment
}));
We used an arrow function above, but it also works with regular functions:
// Correct
this.setState(function(state, props) {
return {
counter: state.counter + props.increment
};
});
When you call
setState()
, React merges the object you provide into the current state.
For example, your state may contain several independent variables:
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
posts: [], comments: [] };
}
Then you can update them independently with separate
setState()
calls:
componentDidMount() {
fetchPosts().then(response => {
this.setState({
posts: response.posts });
});
fetchComments().then(response => {
this.setState({
comments: response.comments });
});
}
The merging is shallow, so
this.setState({comments})
leaves
this.state.posts
intact, but completely replaces
this.state.comments
.
Neither parent nor child components can know if a certain component is stateful or stateless, and they shouldn’t care whether it is defined as a function or a class.
This is why state is often called local or encapsulated. It is not accessible to any component other than the one that owns and sets it.
A component may choose to pass its state down as props to its child components:
<FormattedDate date={this.state.date} />
The
FormattedDate
component would receive the
date
in its props and wouldn’t know whether it came from the
Clock
’s state, from the
Clock
’s props, or was typed by hand:
function FormattedDate(props) {
return <h2>It is {props.date.toLocaleTimeString()}.</h2>;
}
Try it on CodePen
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 imagine a component tree as a waterfall of props, each component’s state is like an additional water source that joins it at an arbitrary point but also flows down.
To show that all components are truly isolated, we can create an
App
component that renders three
<Clock>
s:
function App() {
return (
<div>
<Clock /> <Clock /> <Clock /> </div>
);
}
Try it on CodePen
Each
Clock
sets up its own timer and updates independently.
In React apps, whether a component is stateful or stateless is considered an implementation detail of the component that may change over time. You can use stateless components inside stateful components, and vice versa.
Handling events with React elements is very similar to handling events on DOM elements. There are some syntax differences:
For example, the HTML:
<button onclick="activateLasers()">
Activate Lasers
</button>
is slightly different in React:
<button onClick={activateLasers}> Activate Lasers
</button>
Another difference is that you cannot return
false
to prevent default behavior in React. You must call
preventDefault
explicitly. For example, with plain HTML, to prevent the default form behavior of submitting, you can write:
<form onsubmit="console.log('You clicked submit.'); return false">
<button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>
In React, this could instead be:
function Form() {
function handleSubmit(e) {
e.preventDefault(); console.log('You clicked submit.');
}
return (
<form onSubmit={handleSubmit}>
<button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>
);
}
Here,
e
is a synthetic event. React defines these synthetic events according to the
W3C spec, so you don’t need to worry about cross-browser compatibility. React events do not work exactly the same as native events. See the
SyntheticEvent
reference guide to learn more.
When using React, you generally don’t need to call
addEventListener
to add listeners to a DOM element after it is created. Instead, just provide a listener when the element is initially rendered.
When you define a component using an ES6 class, a common pattern is for an event handler to be a method on the class. For example, this
Toggle
component renders a button that lets the user toggle between “ON” and “OFF” states:
class Toggle extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {isToggleOn: true};
// This binding is necessary to make `this` work in the callback this.handleClick = this.handleClick.bind(this); }
handleClick() { this.setState(prevState => ({ isToggleOn: !prevState.isToggleOn })); }
render() {
return (
<button onClick={this.handleClick}> {this.state.isToggleOn ? 'ON' : 'OFF'}
</button>
);
}
}
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You have to be careful about the meaning of
this
in JSX callbacks. In JavaScript, class methods are not bound by default. If you forget to bind
this.handleClick
and pass it to
onClick
,
this
will be
undefined
when the function is actually called.
This is not React-specific behavior; it is a part of how functions work in JavaScript. Generally, if you refer to a method without
()
after it, such as
onClick={this.handleClick}
, you should bind that method.
If calling
bind
annoys you, there are two ways you can get around this. You can use public class fields syntax to correctly bind callbacks:
class LoggingButton extends React.Component {
// This syntax ensures `this` is bound within handleClick. handleClick = () => { console.log('this is:', this); }; render() {
return (
<button onClick={this.handleClick}>
Click me
</button>
);
}
}
This syntax is enabled by default in Create React App.
If you aren’t using class fields syntax, you can use an arrow function in the callback:
class LoggingButton extends React.Component {
handleClick() {
console.log('this is:', this);
}
render() {
// This syntax ensures `this` is bound within handleClick return ( <button onClick={() => this.handleClick()}> Click me
</button>
);
}
}
The problem with this syntax is that a different callback is created each time the
LoggingButton
renders. In most cases, this is fine. However, if this callback is passed as a prop to lower components, those components might do an extra re-rendering. We generally recommend binding in the constructor or using the class fields syntax, to avoid this sort of performance problem.
Inside a loop, it is common to want to pass an extra parameter to an event handler. For example, if
id
is the row ID, either of the following would work:
<button onClick={(e) => this.deleteRow(id, e)}>Delete Row</button>
<button onClick={this.deleteRow.bind(this, id)}>Delete Row</button>
The above two lines are equivalent, and use arrow functions and
Function.prototype.bind
respectively.
In both cases, the
e
argument representing the React event will be passed as a second argument after the ID. With an arrow function, we have to pass it explicitly, but with
bind
any further arguments are automatically forwarded.