Getting Started with React – An Overview and Walkthrough

I tried to condense everything I’ve learned into a nice introduction to share with you, so here it is.

Prerequisites

There are a few things you should know in advance before you start playing around with React. If you’ve never used JavaScript or the DOM at all before, for example, I would get more familiar with those before trying to tackle React.

Here are what I consider to be React prerequisites.

Goals

  • Learn about essential React concepts and related terms, such as Babel, Webpack, JSX, components, props, state, and lifecycle.
  • Build a very simple React app that demonstrates the above concepts.

View Source on GitHub

What is React?

  • React is a JavaScript library – one of the most popular ones, with over 100,000 stars on GitHub.
  • React is not a framework (unlike Angular, which is more opinionated).
  • React is an open-source project created by Facebook.
  • React is used to build user interfaces (UI) on the front end.
  • React is the view layer of an MVC application (Model View Controller)

One of the most important aspects of React is the fact that you can create components, which are like custom, reusable HTML elements, to quickly and efficiently build user interfaces. React also streamlines how data is stored and handled, using state and props.

We’ll go over all of this and more throughout the article, so let’s get started.

Setup and Installation

There are a few ways to set up React, and I’ll show you two so you get a good idea of how it works.

Static HTML File

This first method is not a popular way to set up React and is not how we’ll be doing the rest of our tutorial, but it will be familiar and easy to understand if you’ve ever used a library like jQuery, and it’s the least scary way to get started if you’re not familiar with Webpack, Babel, and Node.js.

Let’s start by making a basic index.html file. We’re going to load in three CDNs in the head – React, React DOM, and Babel. We’re also going to make a div with an id called root, and finally we’ll create a script tag where your custom code will live.

index.html

<!doctype html>
<html>

<head>
    <meta charset="utf-8">

    <title>Hello React!</title>

    <script src="https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/umd/react.development.js"></script>
    <script src="https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/umd/react-dom.development.js"></script>
    <script src="https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/babel.js"></script>
</head>

<body>

    <div id="root"></div>

    <script type="text/babel">
        // React code will go here
    </script>

</body>

</html>

I’m loading in the latest stable versions of the libraries as of the time of this writing.

  • React – the React top level API
  • React DOM – adds DOM-specific methods
  • Babel – a JavaScript compiler that lets us use ES6+ in old browsers

The entry point for our app will be the root div element, which is named by convention. You’ll also notice the text/babel script type, which is mandatory for using Babel.

Now, let’s write our first code block of React. We’re going to use ES6 classes to create a React component called App.

class App extends React.Component {
   //...
}

Now we’ll add the render() method, the only required method in a class component, which is used to render DOM nodes.

class App extends React.Component {
    render() { 
        return (
           //...
        ); 
    } 
}

Inside the return, we’re going to put what looks like a simple HTML element. Note that we’re not returning a string here, so don’t use quotes around the element. This is called JSX, and we’ll learn more about it soon.

class App extends React.Component {
    render() { 
        return (
           <h1>Hello React!</h1>
        ); 
    } 
}

Finally, we’re going to use the React DOM render() method to render the App class we created into the root div in our HTML.

ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById('root'));

Here is the full code for our index.html.

index.html

<!doctype html>
<html>

<head>
    <meta charset="utf-8">

    <title>Hello React!</title>

    <script src="https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/umd/react.development.js"></script>
    <script src="https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/umd/react-dom.development.js"></script>
    <script src="https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/babel.js"></script>
</head>

<body>

    <div id="root"></div>

    <script type="text/babel">
        class App extends React.Component { 
            render() { 
                return (
                    <h1>Hello world!</h1>
                ); 
            } 
        } 

        ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById('root'));
    </script>

</body>

</html>

Now if you view your index.html in the browser, you’ll see the h1 tag we created rendered to the DOM.

Cool! Now that you’ve done this, you can see that React isn’t so insanely scary to get started with. It’s just some JavaScript helper libraries that we can load into our HTML.

We’ve done this for demonstration purposes, but from here out we’re going to use another method: Create React App.

Create React App

The method I just used of loading JavaScript libraries into a static HTML page and rendering the React and Babel on the fly is not very efficient, and is hard to maintain.

Fortunately, Facebook has created Create React App, an environment that comes pre-configured with everything you need to build a React app. It will create a live development server, use Webpack to automatically compile React, JSX, and ES6, auto-prefix CSS files, and use ESLint to test and warn about mistakes in the code.

To set up create-react-app, run the following code in your terminal, one directory up from where you want the project to live. Make sure you have 5.2 or higher in Node.js.

npx create-react-app react-tutorial

Once that finishes installing, move to the newly created directory and start the project.

cd react-tutorial
npm start

Once you run this command, a new window will popup at localhost:3000 with your new React app.

If you look into the project structure, you’ll see a /public and /src directory, along with the regular node_modules, .gitignore, README.md, and package.json.

In /public, our important file is index.html, which is very similar to the static index.html file we made earlier – just a root div. This time, no libraries or scripts are being loaded in. The /src directory will contain all our React code.

To see how the environment automatically compiles and updates your React code, find the line that looks like this in /src/App.js:

To get started, edit <code>src/App.js</code> and save to reload.

And replace it with any other text. Once you save the file, you’ll notice localhost:3000 compiles and refreshes with the new data.

Go ahead and delete all the files out of the /src directory, and we’ll create our own boilerplate file without any bloat. We’ll just keep index.css and index.js.

For index.css, I just copy-and-pasted the contents of Primitive CSS into the file. If you want, you can use Bootstrap or whatever CSS framework you want, or nothing at all. I just find it easier to work with.

Now in index.js, we’re importing React, ReactDOM, and the CSS file.

src/index.js

import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import './index.css';

Let’s create our App component again. Before, we just had an <h1>, but now I’m adding in a div element with a class as well. You’ll notice that we use className instead of class. This is our first hint that the code being written here is JavaScript, and not actually HTML.

class App extends Component {
    render() {
        return (
            <div className="App">
                <h1>Hello, React!</h1>
            </div>
        );
    }
}

Finally, we’ll render the App to the root as before.

ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById('root'));

Here’s our full index.js. This time, we’re loading the Component as a property of React, so we no longer need to extend React.Component.

src/index.js

import React, { Component } from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import './index.css';

class App extends Component {
    render() {
        return (
            <div className="App">
                <h1>Hello, React!</h1>
            </div>
        );
    }
}

ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById('root'));

If you go back to localhost:3000, you’ll see “Hello, React!” just like before. We have the beginnings of a React app now.

React Developer Tools

There is an extension called React Developer Tools that will make your life much easier when working with React. Download React DevTools for Chrome, or whatever browser you prefer to work on.

After you install it, when you open DevTools, you’ll see a tab for React. Click on it, and you’ll be able to inspect components as they’re written. You can still go to the Elements tab to see the actual DOM output. It may not seem like that much of a deal now, but as the app gets more complicated, it will become increasingly necessary to use.

Now we have all the tools and setup we need to actually begin working with React.

JSX: JavaScript + XML

As you’ve seen, we’ve been using what looks like HTML in our React code, but it’s not quite HTML. This is JSX, which stands for JavaScript XML.

With JSX, we can write what looks like HTML, and also we can create and use our own XML-like tags. Here’s what JSX looks like assigned to a variable.

JSX

const heading = <h1 className="site-heading">Hello, React</h1>;

Using JSX is not mandatory for writing React. Under the hood, it’s running createElement, which takes the tag, object containing the properties, and children of the component and renders the same information. The below code will have the same output as the JSX above.

Non-JSX

const heading = React.createElement(
    'h1',
    {className: 'site-heading'},
    'Hello, React!'
);

JSX is actually closer to JavaScript, not HTML, so there are a few key differences to note when writing it.

  • className is used instead of class for adding CSS classes, as class is a reserved keyword in JavaScript.
  • Properties and methods in JSX are camelCase – onclick will become onClick.
  • Self-closing tags must end in a slash – e.g. <img />

JavaScript expressions can also be embedded inside JSX using curly braces, including variables, functions, and properties.

const name = 'Tania';
const heading = <h1>Hello, {name}</h1> ;

JSX is easier to write and understand than creating and appending many elements in vanilla JavaScript, and is one of the reasons people love React so much.

Components

So far, we’ve created one component – the App component. Almost everything in React consists of components, which can be class components or simple components.

Most React apps have many small components, and everything loads into the main App component. Components also often get their own file, so let’s change up our project to do so.

Remove the App class from index.js, so it looks like this.

src/index.js

import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import App from './App';
import './index.css';

ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById('root'));

We’ll create a new file called App.js and put the component in there.

src/App.js

import React, {Component} from 'react';

class App extends Component {
    render() {
        return (
            <div className="App">
                <h1>Hello, React!</h1>
            </div>
        );
    }
}

export default App;

We export the component as App and load it in index.js. It’s not mandatory to separate components into files, but an application will start to get unwieldy and out-of-hand if you don’t.

Class Components

Let’s create another component. We’re going to create a table. Make Table.js, and fill it with the following data.

src/Table.js

import React, {Component} from 'react';

class Table extends Component {
    render() {
        return (
            <table>
                <thead>
                    <tr>
                        <th>Name</th>
                        <th>Job</th>
                    </tr>
                </thead>
                <tbody>
                    <tr>
                        <td>Charlie</td>
                        <td>Janitor</td>
                    </tr>
                    <tr>
                        <td>Mac</td>
                        <td>Bouncer</td>
                    </tr>
                    <tr>
                        <td>Dee</td>
                        <td>Aspiring actress</td>
                    </tr>
                    <tr>
                        <td>Dennis</td>
                        <td>Bartender</td>
                    </tr>
                </tbody>
            </table>
        );
    }
}

export default Table;

This component we created is a custom class component. We capitalize custom components to differentiate them from regular HTML elements. Back in App.js, we can load in the Table, first by importing it in:

import Table from './Table';

Then by loading it into the render() of App, where before we had “Hello, React!”. I also changed the class of the outer container.

return (
    <div className="container">
        <Table />
    </div>
);

If you check back on your live environment, you’ll see the Table loaded in.

Now we’ve seen what a custom class component is. We could reuse this component over and over. However, since the data is hard-coded into it, it wouldn’t be too useful at the moment.

Simple Components

The other type of component in React is the simple component, which is a function. This component doesn’t use the class keyword. Let’s take our Table and make two simple components for it – a table header, and a table body.

We’re going to use ES6 arrow functions to create these simple components. First, the table header.

const TableHeader = () => { 
    return (
        <thead>
            <tr>
                <th>Name</th>
                <th>Job</th>
            </tr>
        </thead>
    );
}

Then the body.

const TableBody = () => { 
    return (
        <tbody>
            <tr>
                <td>Charlie</td>
                <td>Janitor</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td>Mac</td>
                <td>Bouncer</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td>Dee</td>
                <td>Aspiring actress</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td>Dennis</td>
                <td>Bartender</td>
            </tr>
        </tbody>
    );
}

Now our Table class will look like this.

class Table extends Component {
    render() {
        return (
            <table>
                <TableHeader />
                <TableBody />
            </table>
        );
    }
}

Everything should appear as it did before. As you can see, components can be nested in other components, and simple and class components can be mixed.

A class component must include render(), and the return can only return one parent element.

As a wrap up, let’s compare a simple component with a class component.

Simple Component

const SimpleComponent = () => { 
    return <div>Example</div>;
}

Class Component

class ClassComponent extends Component {
    render() {
        return <div>Example</div>;
    }
}

Note that if the return is contained to one line, it does not need parentheses.

Props

Right now, we have a cool Table component, but the data is being hard-coded. One of the big deals about React is how it handles data, and it does so with properties, referred to as props, and with state. First, we’ll focus on handling data with props.

First, let’s remove all the data from our TableBody component.

Table.js

const TableBody = () => { 
    return <tbody></tbody>;
}

Then let’s move all that data to an array of objects, as if we were bringing in a JSON-based API. We’ll have to create this array inside our render().

App.js

class App extends Component {
    render() {
        const characters = [
            {
                'name': 'Charlie',
                'job': 'Janitor'
            },
            {
                'name': 'Mac',
                'job': 'Bouncer'
            },
            {
                'name': 'Dee',
                'job': 'Aspring actress'
            },
            {
                'name': 'Dennis',
                'job': 'Bartender'
            }
        ];

        return (
            <div className="container">
                <Table />
            </div>
        );
    }
}

Now, we’re going to pass the data through to the child component (Table) with properties, kind of how you might pass data through using data- attributes. We can call the property whatever we want, as long as it’s not a reserved keyword, so I’ll go with characterData. The data I’m passing through is the characters variable, and I’ll put curly braces around it as it’s a JavaScript expression.

return (
    <div className="container">
        <Table characterData={characters} />
    </div>
);

Now that data is being passed through to Table, and we have to work on accessing it from the other side.

Table.js

class Table extends Component {
    render() {
        const { characterData } = this.props;

        return (
            <table>
                <TableHeader />
                <TableBody characterData={characterData} />
            </table>
        );
    }
}

If you open up React DevTools and inspect the Table component, you’ll see the array of data in the property. The data that’s stored here is known as the virtual DOM, which is a fast and efficient way of syncing data with the actual DOM.

This data is not in the actual DOM yet, though. In Table, we can access all props through this.props. We’re only passing one props through, characterData, so we’ll use this.props.characterData to retrieve that data.

I’m going to use the ES6 property shorthand to create a variable that contains this.props.characterData.

const { characterData } = this.props;

Since our Table component actually consists of two smaller simple components, I’m going to pass it through to the TableBody, once again through props.

Table.js

class Table extends Component {
    render() {
        const { characterData } = this.props;

        return (
            <table>
                <TableHeader />
                <TableBody characterData={characterData} />
            </table>
        );
    }
}

Right now, TableBody takes no parameters and returns a single tag.

const TableBody = () => { 
    return <tbody></tbody>;
}

We’re going to pass the props through as a parameter, and map through the array to return a table row for each object in the array. This map will be contained in the rows variable, which we’ll return as an expression.

const TableBody = props => { 
    const rows = props.characterData.map((row, index) => {
        return (
            <tr key={index}>
                <td>{row.name}</td>
                <td>{row.job}</td>
            </tr>
        );
    });

    return <tbody>{rows}</tbody>;
}

If you view the front end of the app, all the data is loading in now.

You’ll notice I’ve added a key index to each table row. You should always use keys when making lists in React, as they help identify each list item. We’ll also see how this is necessary in a moment when we want to manipulate list items.

Props are an effective way to pass existing data to a React component, however the component cannot change the props – they’re read-only. In the next section, we’ll learn how to use state to have further control over handling data in React.

State

Right now, we’re storing our character data in an array in a variable, and passing it through as props. This is good to start, but imagine if we want to be able to delete an item from the array. With props, we have a one way data flow, but with state we can update private data from a component.

You can think of state as any data that should be saved and modified without necessarily being added to a database – for example, adding and removing items from a shopping cart before confirming your purchase.

To start, we’re going to create a state object.

class App extends Component {
    state = {};

The object will contain properties for everything you want to store in the state. For us, it’s characters.

class App extends Component {
    state = {
        characters: []        
     }; 

Move the entire array of objects we created earlier into state.characters.

class App extends Component {
    state = {
        characters: [
            {
                'name': 'Charlie',
                // the rest of the data
        ]        
     };

Our data is officially contained in the state. Since we want to be able to remove a character from the table, we’re going to create a removeCharacter method on the parent App class.

To retrieve the state, we’ll get this.state.characters using the same ES6 method as before. To update the state, we’ll use this.setState(), a built-in method for manipulating state. We’ll filter the array based on an index that we pass through, and return the new array.

You must use this.setState() to modify an array. Simply applying a new value to this.state.property will not work.

App.js

removeCharacter = index => {
    const { characters } = this.state;

    this.setState({
        characters: characters.filter((character, i) => { 
            return i !== index;
        })
    });
}

filter does not mutate but rather creates a new array, and is a preferred method for modifying arrays in JavaScript. This particular method is testing an index vs. all the indices in the array, and returning all but the one that is passed through.

Now we have to pass that function through to the component, and render a button next to each character that can invoke the function. We’ll pass the removeCharacter function through as a prop to Table.

App.js

return (
    <div className="container">
        <Table
            characterData={characters}
            removeCharacter={this.removeCharacter} 
        />
    </div>
);

Don’t forget to put const { characters } = this.state to pull the correct data from state.

Since we’re passing it down to TableBody from Table, we’re going to have to pass it through again as a prop, just like we did with the character data.

Table.js

class Table extends Component {
    render() {
        const { characterData, removeCharacter } = this.props;

        return (
            <table>
                <TableHeader />
                <TableBody 
                    characterData={characterData} 
                    removeCharacter={removeCharacter} 
                />
            </table>
        );
    }
}

Here’s where that index we defined in the removeCharacter() method comes in. In the TableBody component, we’ll pass the key/index through as a parameter, so the filter function knows which item to remove. We’ll create a button with an onClick and pass it through.

Table.js

 <tr key={index}>
    <td>{row.name}</td>
    <td>{row.job}</td>
    <td><button onClick={() => props.removeCharacter(index)}>Delete</button></td>
</tr>

The onClick function must pass through a function that returns the removeCharacter() method, otherwise it will try to run automatically.

Awesome. Now we have delete buttons, and we can modify our state by deleting a character.

I deleted Mac.

Now you should understand how state gets initialized and how it can be modified.

Submitting Form Data

Now we have data stored in state, and we can remove any item from the state. However, what if we wanted to be able to add new data to state? In a real world application, you’d more likely start with empty state and add to it, such as with a to-do list or a shopping cart.

Before anything else, let’s remove all the hard-coded data from state.characters, as we’ll be updating that through the form now.

class App extends Component {
    state = {
        characters: []
    };

Now let’s go ahead and create a Form component in a new file called Form.js. We’re going to create a class component, and within we’ll use a constructor(), which we haven’t done thus far. We’ll need the constructor() to use this, and to receive the props of the parent.

We’re going to set the initial state of the Form to be an object with some empty properties, and assign that initial state to this.state.

Form.js

import React, { Component } from 'react';

class Form extends Component {
    constructor(props) {
        super(props);

        this.initialState = {
            name: '',
            job: ''
        };

        this.state = this.initialState;
    }
}

Our goal for this form will be to update the state of Form every time a field is changed in the form, and when we submit, all that data will pass to the App state, which will then update the Table.

First, we’ll make the function that will run every time a change is made to an input. The event will be passed through, and we’ll set the state of Form to have the name (key) and value of the inputs.

handleChange = event => {
    const {name, value} = event.target;

    this.setState({
        [name] : value
    });
}

Let’s get this working before we move on to submitting the form. In the render, let’s get our two properties from state, and assign them as the values that correspond to the proper form keys. We’ll run the handleChange() method as the onChange of the input, and finally we’ll export the Form component.

render() {
    const { name, job } = this.state; 

    return (
        <form>
            <label>Name</label>
            <input 
                type="text" 
                name="name" 
                value={name} 
                onChange={this.handleChange} />
            <label>Job</label>
            <input 
                type="text" 
                name="job" 
                value={job} 
                onChange={this.handleChange}/>
        </form>
    );
}

export default Form;

In App.js, we can render the form below the table.

App.js

return (
    <div className="container">
        <Table
            characterData={characters}
            removeCharacter={this.removeCharacter}
        />
        <Form />
    </div>
);

Now if we go to the front end of our app, we’ll see a form that doesn’t have a submit yet. Update some fields and you’ll see the local state of Form being updated.

Cool. Last step is to allow us to actually submit that data and update the parent state. We’ll create a function called handleSubmit() on App that will update the state by taking the existing this.state.characters and adding the new character parameter, using the ES6 spread operator.

App.js

handleSubmit = character => {
    this.setState({characters: [...this.state.characters, character]});
}

Let’s make sure we pass that through as a parameter on Form.

<Form handleSubmit={this.handleSubmit} />

Now in Form, we’ll create a method called submitForm() that will call that function, and pass the Form state through as the character parameter we defined earlier. It will also reset the state to the initial state, to clear the form after submit.

Form.js

submitForm = () => {
    this.props.handleSubmit(this.state);
    this.setState(this.initialState);
}

Finally, we’ll add a submit button to submit the form. We’re using an onClick instead of an onSubmit since we’re not using the standard submit functionality. The click will call the submitForm we just made.

 <input 
    type="button" 
    value="Submit" 
    onClick={this.submitForm} />

And that’s it! The app is complete. We can create, add, and remove users from our table. Since the Table and TableBody were already pulling from the state, it will display properly.

If you got lost anywhere along the way, you can view the complete source on GitHub.

Pulling in API Data

One very common usage of React is pulling in data from an API. If you’re not familiar with what an API is or how to connect to one, I would recommend reading How to Connect to an API with JavaScript, which will walk you through what APIs are and how to use them with vanilla JavaScript.

As a little test, we can create an Api.js file, and create a new App in there. A public API we can test with is the Wikipedia API, and I have a URL endpoint right here for a random* search. You can go to that link to see the API – and make sure you have JSONView installed on your browser.

We’re going to use JavaScript’s built-in Fetch to gather the data from that URL endpoint and display it. You can switch between the app we created and this test file by just changing the URL in index.jsimport App from './Api';.

I’m not going to explain this code line-by-line, as we’ve already learned about creating a component, rendering, and mapping through a state array. The new aspect to this code is componentDidMount(), a React lifecycle method. Lifecycle is the order in which methods are called in React. Mounting refers to an item being inserted into the DOM.

When we pull in API data, we want to use componentDidMount, because we want to make sure the component has rendered to the DOM before we bring in the data. In the below snippet, you’ll see how we bring in data from the Wikipedia API, and display it on the page

Api.js

import React, { Component } from 'react';

class App extends Component {
    state = {
        data: []
    };

    // Code is invoked after the component is mounted/inserted into the DOM tree.
    componentDidMount() {
        const url = "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/api.php?action=opensearch&search=Seona+Dancing&format=json&origin=*";

        fetch(url)
            .then(result => result.json())
            .then(result => {
                this.setState({
                    data: result
                })
            });
    }

    render() {
        const { data } = this.state;

        const result = data.map((entry, index) => {
            return <li key={index}>{entry}</li>;
        });

        return <ul>{result}</ul>;
    }
}

export default App;

Once you save and run this file in the local server, you’ll see the Wikipedia API data displayed in the DOM.

There are other lifecycle methods, but going over them will be beyond the scope of this article. You can read more about React components here.

*Wikipedia search choice may not be random. It might be an article that I spearheaded back in 2005.

Building and Deploying a React App

Everything we’ve done so far has been in a development environment. We’ve been compiling, hot-reloading, and updating on the fly. For production, we’re going to want to have static files loading in – none of the source code. We can do this by making a build and deploying it.

Now, if you just want to compile all the React code and place it in the root of a directory somewhere, all you need to do is run the following line:

npm run build

This will create a build folder which will contain your app. Put the contents of that folder anywhere, and you’re done!

We can also take it a step further, and have npm deploy for us. We’re going to build to GitHub pages, so you’ll already have to be familiar with Git and getting your code up on GitHub.

Make sure you’ve exited out of your local React environment, so the code isn’t currently running. First, we’re going to add a homepage field to package.json, that has the URL we want our app to live on.

package.json

  "homepage": "https://github.com/edytk/learn-react/",

We’ll also add these two lines to the scripts property.

"scripts": {
  // ...
  "predeploy": "npm run build",
  "deploy": "gh-pages -d build"
}

In your project, you’ll add gh-pages to the devDependencies.

npm install --save-dev gh-pages

We’ll create the build, which will have all the compiled, static files.

npm run build

Finally, we’ll deploy to gh-pages.

npm run deploy

And we’re done! The app is now available live at https://github.com/edytk/learn-react/.

Conclusion

This article should have given you a good introduction to React, simple and class components, state, props, working with form data, pulling data in from an API, and deploying an app. There is much more to learn and do with React, but I hope you feel confident delving in and playing around with React yourself now.

View Source on GitHub View Project

Please let me know if anything was unclear, or if there’s anything else you’d like to see in this or a subsequent article. The original article is from Tania Rascia



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