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React 17 Design Patterns and Best Practices

You're reading from   React 17 Design Patterns and Best Practices Design, build, and deploy production-ready web applications using industry-standard practices

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800560444
Length 394 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Hello React!
2. Taking Your First Steps with React FREE CHAPTER 3. Cleaning Up Your Code 4. How React Works
5. React Hooks 6. Exploring Popular Composition Patterns 7. Understanding GraphQL with a Real Project 8. Managing Data 9. Writing Code for the Browser 10. Performance, Improvements, and Production!
11. Making Your Components Look Beautiful 12. Server-Side Rendering for Fun and Profit 13. Improving the Performance of Your Applications 14. Testing and Debugging 15. React Router 16. Anti-Patterns to Be Avoided 17. Deploying to Production 18. Next Steps 19. About Packt 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

How React elements work

This book assumes that you are familiar with components and their instances, but there is another object you should know about if you want to use React effectively – the element.

Whenever you call createClass, extend Component, or declare a stateless function, you are creating a component. React manages all the instances of your components at runtime, and there can be more than one instance of the same component in memory at a given point in time.

As mentioned previously, React follows a declarative paradigm, and there's no need to tell it how to interact with the DOM; you declare what you want to see on the screen, and React does the job for you.

As you might have already experienced, most other UI libraries work the other way round: they leave the responsibility of keeping the interface updated to the developer, who has to manage the creation and destruction of the DOM elements manually.

To control the UI flow, React uses a particular type of object, called an element, which describes what has to be shown on the screen. These immutable objects are much simpler compared to the components and their instances and contain only the information that is strictly needed to represent the interface.

The following is an example of an element:

  { 
type: Title,
props: {
color: 'red',
children: 'Hello, Title!'
}
}

Elements have type, which is the most important attribute, and some properties. There is also a particular property, called children, that is optional and represents the direct descendant of the element.

type is important because it tells React how to deal with the element itself. If type is a string, the element represents a DOM node, while if type is a function, the element is a component.

DOM elements and components can be nested with each other as follows, to represent the render tree:

  { 
type: Title,
props: {
color: 'red',
children: {
type: 'h1',
props: {
children: 'Hello, H1!'
}
}
}
}

When the type of the element is a function, React calls the function, passing props to get back the underlying elements. It keeps on performing the same operation recursively on the result until it gets a tree of DOM nodes that React can render on the screen. This process is called reconciliation, and it is used by both React DOM and React Native to create the UIs of their respective platforms.

React is a game-changer, so at the beginning, the React syntax might seem weird to you, but once you understand how it works, you will love it, and for this, you need to unlearn everything you know so far.

You have been reading a chapter from
React 17 Design Patterns and Best Practices - Third Edition
Published in: May 2021
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781800560444
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