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React Key Concepts

You're reading from   React Key Concepts Consolidate your knowledge of React's core features

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803234502
Length 590 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Maximilian Schwarzmüller Maximilian Schwarzmüller
Author Profile Icon Maximilian Schwarzmüller
Maximilian Schwarzmüller
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface
1. React – What and Why FREE CHAPTER 2. Understanding React Components and JSX 3. Components and Props 4. Working with Events and State 5. Rendering Lists and Conditional Content 6. Styling React Apps 7. Portals and Refs 8. Handling Side Effects 9. Behind the Scenes of React and Optimization Opportunities 10. Working with Complex State 11. Building Custom React Hooks 12. Multipage Apps with React Router 13. Managing Data with React Router 14. Next Steps and Further Resources Appendix

Introduction

Microsoft first launched the Microsoft .NET Framework in June 2000, with the code name Next Generation Windows Services. Amidst a barrage of marketing zeal, Microsoft seemed to add the .NET moniker to every product in its portfolio: Windows .NET Server (later renamed Windows Server 2003), Visual Studio.NET, and even MapPoint .NET.

The .NET Framework provided application developers with a host of underlying features and technologies on which to base their applications. These worked well then (20+ years ago), but newer features later emerged based on advances in the underlying technologies. For example, SOAP (Simple Object Access Protocol) and XML-based web services have given way to REST (Representation State Transfer) and JSON (JavaScript Object Notation).

Microsoft made considerable improvements to the .NET Framework with each release and added new features based on customer feedback. The .NET started as closed-source, but Microsoft transitioned .NET to open source, aka...

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