I'm having trouble overcoming an issue with react router. The scenario is that i need to pass children routes a set of props from a state parent component and route.
what i would like to do is pass childRouteA its propsA, and pass childRouteB its propsB. However, the only way i can figure out how to do this is to pass RouteHandler both propsA and propsB which means every child route gets every child prop regardless of whether its relevant. this isnt a blocking issue at the moment, but i can see a time when i'd be using the two of the same component which means that keys on propA will overwritten by the keys by the keys of propB.
# routes
routes = (
<Route name='filter' handler={ Parent } >
<Route name='price' handler={ Child1 } />
<Route name='time' handler={ Child2 } />
</Route>
)
# Parent component
render: ->
<div>
<RouteHandler {...#allProps()} />
</div>
timeProps: ->
foo: 'bar'
priceProps: ->
baz: 'qux'
# assign = require 'object-assign'
allProps: ->
assign {}, timeProps(), priceProps()
This actually works the way i expect it to. When i link to /filters/time i get the Child2 component rendered. when i go to /filters/price i get the Child1 component rendered. the issue is that by doing this process, Child1 and Child2 are both passed allProps() even though they only need price and time props, respectively. This can become an issue if those two components have an identical prop name and in general is just not a good practice to bloat components with unneeded props (as there are more than 2 children in my actual case).
so in summary, is there a way to pass the RouteHandler timeProps when i go to the time route (filters/time) and only pass priceProps to RouteHandler when i go to the price route (filters/price) and avoid passing all props to all children routes?
I ran into a similar issue and discovered that you can access props set on the Route through this.props.route in your route component. Knowing this, I organized my components like this:
index.js
React.render((
<Router history={new HashHistory()}>
<Route component={App}>
<Route
path="/hello"
name="hello"
component={views.HelloView}
fruits={['orange', 'banana', 'grape']}
/>
</Route>
</Router>
), document.getElementById('app'));
App.js
class App extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
}
render() {
return <div>{this.props.children}</div>;
}
}
HelloView.js
class HelloView extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
}
render() {
return <div>
<ul>
{this.props.route.fruits.map(fruit =>
<li key={fruit}>{fruit}</li>
)}
</ul>
</div>;
}
}
This is using react-router v1.0-beta3. Hope this helps!
Ok, now that I'm understanding your issue better, here's what you could try.
Since your child props are coming from a single parent, your parent component, not react-router, should be the one managing which child gets rendered so that you can control which props are passed.
You could try changing your route to use a param, then inspect that param in your parent component to render the appropriate child component.
Route
<Route name="filter" path="filter/:name" handler={Parent} />
Parent Component
render: function () {
if (this.props.params.name === 'price') {
return <Child1 {...this.getPriceProps()} />
} else if (this.props.params.name === 'time') {
return <Child2 {...this.getTimeProps()} />
} else {
// something else
}
}
In child component, insted of
return <div>{this.props.children}</div>
You may merge props with parent
var childrenWithProps = React.cloneElement(this.props.children, this.props);
return <div>{childrenWithProps}</div>
React.cloneElement can be used to render the child component and so as pass any data which is available inside the child route component which is defined in the route.
For eg, here I am passing the value of user to the react childRoute component.
{React.cloneElement(this.props.childRoute, { user: this.props.user })}
Related
I am new to React and I have a Java background, so forgive if the wording of this question doesn't really make sense.
I would like to "pass" an instance of a component into another component (that uses the passed component in it's render() method)
How can I do this?
Sorry for the bad naming, but I hope you're able to see the different use cases from what I understand from your question:
// Component that receives another component being passed in its props
function Renderer1(props) {
return props.component
}
// Component that receives another component and creates an instance of it
// this way this component has more control of rendering the passed component
// and the props you want to pass to it
function Renderer2(props) {
return <props.component />
}
// Component being passed in props
function PropComponent(){
return <div>Hello world!</div>
}
// Rendered component, example 1
function Main1() {
return <Renderer1 component={() => <PropComponent />} />
}
// Rendered component, example 2, this one uses Renderer2 component
function Main2() {
return <Renderer2 component={PropComponent} />
}
I hope with these different examples you can get an idea of how to continue with what you're working on :)
The question is not very clear. But from what I understand, there can be multiple ways of doing this.
Component 1
class Component1 extends React.Component {
render() {
return <h1>Component 1</h1>;
}
}
Component 2
class Component2 extends React.Component {
render() {
return (
<React.Fragment>
<h1>Component 2</h1>
{children}
</React.Fragment>
}
}
MainComponent
class MainComponent extends React.Component {
render() {
return (
<Component2>
<Component1 />
</Component2>
}
}
Here, one 'instance' of Component1 is passed to Component2 which then renders the Component1 as one of its children.
Another way is to use Render Props. To understand Render Props in a better way, you can watch this Youtube tutorial.
In my main class I have a nav bar with the options below:
<NavDropdown title="Search" id="collasible-nav-dropdown">
<NavDropdown.Item href="#/searchpage/p" onClick={this.dontEdit}>Find People</NavDropdown.Item>
<NavDropdown.Item href="#/searchpage/s" onClick={this.searchSchool}>Find Schools</NavDropdown.Item>
<NavDropdown.Item href="#/searchpage/w" onClick={this.dontEdit}>Find Work Places</NavDropdown.Item>
</NavDropdown>
These have a route which routes to the same component which then reads the parameter at the end of the URL and runs a different search depending on the value. For example 's' is search schools and 'p' is search people. If I navigate between the different search functions from the nav bar then it doesn't refresh to the new search. For example if I go from 'Find Schools' to 'Find Work' it stays on schools, but if I were to go direct to 'Find Work Places' then it goes there direct. Also if I navigate to the home page and back to another search then it works.
The route looks like:
<Route path="/searchpage/:type" render={props => (<SearchPage {...props} findPerson={this.findPerson} routeReset={this.routeReset} getPersonsByName={this.getPersonsByName} />)}/>
Is anyone able to advise how to get this to route as I want it to? The search component is like:
import Row from 'react-bootstrap/Row';
import Col from 'react-bootstrap/Col';
import Container from 'react-bootstrap/Container';
import Button from 'react-bootstrap/Button';
import Flash from './components/flash';
import Search from "./components/search";
const searchtypes = {"p":"People","w":"Work Places","s":"Schools"};
class SearchPage extends Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
type:this.props.match.params.type
}
}
componentDidMount(){
}
render() {
return (
<Container>
<Row>
<Col>
<h4>Search {searchtypes[this.state.type]}</h4>
<br/>
</Col>
</Row>
<Row><Col><Search {...this.props} type={this.state.type}/></Col></Row>
</Container>
);
}
}
export default SearchPage;
The Route's render prop doesn't remount when the matched route doesn't change, i.e. even when the route matches but the route param is different it won't re-render. Instead use the component prop.
react-router-dom component
When you use component (instead of render or children, below) the
router uses React.createElement to create a new React element from the
given component. That means if you provide an inline function to the
component prop, you would create a new component every render. This
results in the existing component unmounting and the new component
mounting instead of just updating the existing component. When using
an inline function for inline rendering, use the render or the
children prop (below).
<Route
path="/searchpage/:type"
component={props => (
<SearchPage
{...props}
findPerson={this.findPerson}
routeReset={this.routeReset}
getPersonsByName={this.getPersonsByName}
/>
)}
/>
An alternative to this is to implement the componentDidUpdate lifecycle function in SearchPage to detect when the route param prop updates and update the type stored in state. This way the component won't continually unmount/mount each time.
componentDidUpdate(prevProps) {
if (prevProps.match.params.type !== this.props.match.params.type) {
setState({
type: this.props.match.params.type,
});
}
}
Try this:
class SearchPage extends Component {
render() {
return (
<Container>
<Row>
<Col>
<h4>Search {searchtypes[this.props.match.params.type]}</h4>
<br/>
</Col>
</Row>
<Row><Col><Search {...this.props} type={this.props.match.params.type}/></Col></Row>
</Container>
);
}
}
The type data comes from props and therefore you should not persist it on the component state.
Note: Make sure you use react-router Link component it seems you use native a tags
I'm having issues passing a prop to a componentDidMount() call in a child component on my React application.
In my App.js I am passing props via Router like below:
App.js
class App extends Component {
state = {
city: ""
}
componentDidMount() {
this.setState({city: this.props.city});
}
render() {
return (
<div>
<Route path="/" exact render = {() => <Projections city={this.state.city} />} />
<Route path="/:id" component={FullPage} />
</div>
);
}
}
In my Projections.js I have the following:
Projections.js
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
location: this.props.city
}
}
componentDidMount () {
console.log(this.state.location);
console.log(this.props.city);
}
console.log(this.state);' returns an empty string.console.log(this.props.city);` returns an empty string as well.
But I need to access the value of the city prop within componentDidMount(). console.log(this.props.city); within render() returns the prop, but not in componentDidMount()
Why is this and how do I return props within componentDidMount()?
In the constructor you should reference props, not this.props:
location: props.city
<Route path="/" exact render = {() => <Projections city={this.state.city} {...this.props} />} />
Try passing rest of props in route
this is because you assigned props in constructor that time it may or may not receive actual value. And it gets called only once in a component lifecycle.
You can use componentWillReceiveProps to get props whenever it receive and update state accordingly.
Inside Projections.js
UNSAFE_componentWillReceiveProps(nextProps){
if(nextProps.city){
this.setState({location:nextProps.city})
}
}
Here is working codesand
So I have a global nav bar component that sits at the home screen and app screen and a music playing component. On click of one of the items in the nav bar I want to mute something on the music component.
Currently, to mute the music etc I'm using state.
So the way I've got this setup is to pass through an object as props and set that as state like so:
const obj = {
playing: false,
toggleButtonText: 'Play',
muteActive: false,
};
And I pass this as props into my components:
<Router>
<div>
<Nav stateVal={obj} />
<Route exact path="/" render={() => <Start />} />
<Route path="/app" render={() => <App stateVal={obj} />} />
<Modal />
</div>
</Router>
Then in each of my components, I do:
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = this.props.stateVal;
}
So the props are set as the state of the component.
My problem is that I want one component to update the props and the update the state of the other component but I have no idea how I'm going to do that?
Could anyone give me a bit of help or pointers?
Assigning props to state in constructor is an anti-pattern because if the props change later on then the state isn't going to change.
Have the component update the props of the parent and then pass the props down the other child.
If you can't do this for some reason then you should look into Redux, Flux or MobX to handle the state.
Example
class Parent extends React.Component {
setMusicActive = (muteActive) => {
this.setState({ muteActive });
}
<ChildOne muteActive={this.state.muteActive} setMusicActive={this.setMuteActive} />
<ChildTwo muteActive={this.state.muteActive} setMusicActive={this.setMuteActive} />
}
class ChildOne extends React.Component {
someOtherFunction = () => {
this.props.setMuteActive(!this.props.muteActive);
}
}
Updates the value in one place and you can use it in the children.
How I think/understood was that react components update whenever their props or state change.
So I declare my variable:
let percentage = {
width: '10%',
};
and have a setInterval function running to change that variable after so long:
setInterval(function() {
percentage = {
width: '50%',
};
}, 5000);
and below this I render my component:
Meteor.startup(() => {
render((
<Router>
<div>
<Nav />
<Route exact path="/" render={() => <Start percentage={percentage} />} />
<Route path="/app" component={App} />
<Modal />
</div>
</Router>
), document.getElementById('render-target'));
});
Where I display the percentage in another file that looks like:
export default class Start extends Component {
render() {
return (
<div className="home">
<div className="meter orange">
<span style={this.props.percentage} />
</div>
</div>
);
}
}
My component never updates though, I have put a console.log into the setInterval function and get the update variable back but it never refreshes my component.
Have I misunderstood how props updates work?
The parameters passed to a component are copied by value, not reference. So when you render the outermost component, you're passing the current value of percentage into the Start component:
<Start percentage={percentage} />
From the perspective of the Start component, its property never changes, even though the variable that provided its initial value is.
You can't be clever and try to get around this with an object that contains a property percentage either...because the object (the parameter itself) won't change, only its properties.
So what's a poor programmer to do?
It's a bit misleading to say that a component updates when its properties change; components actually update when they're re-rendered. Very often, this happens because the enclosing (parent) component's state changes (or its been re-rendered) and it will be passing new props down to the inner component. The solution in your case is to make percentage part of the state of the enclosing component. So you would have something like this:
class Parent extends Component {
constructor(props, ...args) {
super(props, ...args)
this.state = { percentage: { width: '0%' } }
setInterval(() => this.setState({ percentage: { width: '50%' } }), 5000)
}
render() {
return <Start percentage={this.state.percentage} />
}
}
It's technically correct that a component updates when its props change; however, the only way to change its props is to re-render it! Props are read-only inside a component. Which is why I say it's misleading (or incomplete) to think about prop changes driving component re-rendering.