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React.js Essentials

You're reading from   React.js Essentials A fast-paced guide to designing and building scalable and maintainable web apps with React.js

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783551620
Length 208 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Artemij Fedosejev Artemij Fedosejev
Author Profile Icon Artemij Fedosejev
Artemij Fedosejev
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installing Powerful Tools for Your Project 2. Create Your First React Element FREE CHAPTER 3. Create Your First React Component 4. Make Your React Components Reactive 5. Use Your React Components with Another Library 6. Update Your React Components 7. Build Complex React Components 8. Test Your React Application with Jest 9. Supercharge Your React Architecture with Flux 10. Prepare Your React Application for Painless Maintenance with Flux Index

Understanding React component's lifecycle methods

Think about what a React component does. It describes what to render. We know that it uses the render() method for this. However, sometimes, having only the render() method is not enough because what if we want to do something before or after the component has rendered? What if we want to be able to decide whether a component's render() method should be called at all?

Looks like what we're describing is a process during which the React component is rendered. This process has various stages, for example, before render, render, after render, and so on. In React, this process is called the component's lifecycle. Each React component goes through this process. What we want is a way to hook into that process, and call our own functions at different stages of that process in order to have a greater control over it. For this purpose, React provides a number of methods that we can use to get notified when a certain stage in a...

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