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React and React Native

You're reading from   React and React Native A complete hands-on guide to modern web and mobile development with React.js

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839211140
Length 526 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Adam Boduch Adam Boduch
Author Profile Icon Adam Boduch
Adam Boduch
Roy Derks Roy Derks
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Roy Derks
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Table of Contents (33) Chapters Close

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

The mobile browser experience

Mobile browsers lack many capabilities of mobile applications. This is due to the fact that browsers cannot replicate the same native platform widgets as HTML elements. You can try to do this, but it's often better to just use the native widget, rather than try to replicate it. This is partly because this requires less maintenance effort on your part, and partly because using widgets that are native to the platform means that they're consistent with the rest of the platform. For example, if a date picker in your application looks different from all the date pickers the user interacts with on their phone, this isn't a good thing. Familiarity is key, and using native platform widgets makes familiarity possible.

User interactions on mobile devices are fundamentally different from the interactions that you typically design for the web. Web applications assume the presence of a mouse, for example, and that the click event on a button is just one...

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