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React and React Native

You're reading from   React and React Native Build cross-platform JavaScript applications with native power for the web, desktop, and mobile

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803231280
Length 606 pages
Edition 4th Edition
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Authors (3):
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Roy Derks Roy Derks
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Roy Derks
Mikhail Sakhniuk Mikhail Sakhniuk
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Mikhail Sakhniuk
Adam Boduch Adam Boduch
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Adam Boduch
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Toc

Table of Contents (36) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 – React
2. Chapter 1: Why React? FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Rendering with JSX 4. Chapter 3: Component Properties, State, and Context 5. Chapter 4: Getting Started with Hooks 6. Chapter 5: Event Handling, the React Way 7. Chapter 6: Crafting Reusable Components 8. Chapter 7: The React Component Life Cycle 9. Chapter 8: Validating Component Properties 10. Chapter 9: Handling Navigation with Routes 11. Chapter 10: Code Splitting Using Lazy Components and Suspense 12. Chapter 11: Server-Side React Components 13. Chapter 12: User Interface Framework Components 14. Chapter 13: High-Performance State Updates 15. Part 2 – React Native
16. Chapter 14: Why React Native? 17. Chapter 15: React Native under the Hood 18. Chapter 16: Kick-Starting React Native Projects 19. Chapter 17: Building Responsive Layouts with Flexbox 20. Chapter 18: Navigating Between Screens 21. Chapter 19: Rendering Item Lists 22. Chapter 20: Showing Progress 23. Chapter 21: Geolocation and Maps 24. Chapter 22: Collecting User Input 25. Chapter 23: Displaying Modal Screens 26. Chapter 24: Responding to User Gestures 27. Chapter 25: Using Animations 28. Chapter 26: Controlling Image Display 29. Chapter 27: Going Offline 30. Chapter 28: Selecting Native UI Components Using NativeBase 31. Part 3 – React Architecture
32. Chapter 29: Handling Application State 33. Chapter 30: Why GraphQL? 34. Chapter 31: Building a GraphQL React App 35. Other Books You May Enjoy

Understanding progress and usability

Imagine that you have a microwave oven that has no window and makes no sound. The only way to interact with it is by pressing a button labeled cook. As absurd as this device sounds, it's what many software users face – no indication of progress. Is the microwave cooking anything? If so, how do we know when it will be done?

One way to improve the microwave situation is to add sound. This way, the user gets feedback after pressing the cook button. You've overcome one hurdle, but the user is still left asking, "Where's my food?" Before you go out of business, you had better add some sort of progress measurement display, such as a timer.

It's not that UI programmers don't understand the basic principles of this usability concern; it's just that they have stuff to do, and this sort of thing simply slips through the cracks in terms of priority. In React Native, there are components to give the user...

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