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Last active September 24, 2022 05:10
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Alternative ways to define react Components

The 0.13.0 improvements to React Components are often framed as "es6 classes" but being able to use the new class syntax isn't really the big change. The main thing of note in 0.13 is that React Components are no longer special objects that need to be created using a specific method (createClass()). One of the benefits of this change is that you can use the es6 class syntax, but also tons of other patterns work as well!

Below are a few examples creating React components that all work as expected using a bunch of JS object creation patterns (https://github.com/getify/You-Dont-Know-JS/blob/master/this%20&%20object%20prototypes/ch4.md#mixins). All of the examples are of stateful components, and so need to delegate to React.Component for setState(), but if you have stateless components each patterns tends to get even simpler. The one major caveat with react components is that you need to assign props and context to the component instance otherwise the component will be static. The reason is that when reconciling updates to props, new instances aren't created props is jsut set to the next props.

Why might you use these patterns? Some are just nicely terse, or maybe you just like the library you are already using for object creation, but generally these patterns offer a lot more in terms of flexibility and functionality. For instance, since most examples are created in a closure you get private variables for free!

function PlainOldObjectComponent(props, context){
var instance = Object.create(React.Component.prototype)
instance.props = props
instance.context = context
instance.state = { message: 'Object literals ftw' }
instance.render = function() {
return <li>
<button onClick={ e => this.setState({ message: 'stateful!' })}>
{this.state.message}
</button>
</li>
}
return instance
}
function MixinComponent(props, context) {
return {
...React.Component.prototype,
props,
context,
state: {
message: 'Instances through Extension'
},
render() {
return <li>
<button onClick={ e => this.setState({ message: 'stateful!' })}>
{this.state.message}
</button>
</li>
}
}
}
function ParasiticComponent(props, context){
var instance = new React.Component(props, context)
instance.state = { message: 'Let me just add a method to this one..' }
instance.render = function() {
return <li>
<button href='#' onClick={()=> this.setState({ message: 'stateful!' })}>
{this.state.message}
</button>
</li>
}
return instance
}
// Stampit is an excellent library by Eric Elliott for object creation.
// https://github.com/ericelliott/stampit
var ReactStamp = stampit.convertConstructor(React.Component)
// ^^^ convenience method for:
// stampit().methods(React.Component.prototype).enclose(React.Component)
var StampitComponent = stampit()
.enclose(function () {
this.state = { message: 'I can even use stampit!' }
})
.methods({
render() {
return <li>
<button href='#' onClick={()=> this.setState({ message: 'stateful!' })}>
{this.state.message}
</button>
</li>
}
});
StampitComponent = stampit.compose(ReactStamp, StampitComponent);
@ericelliott
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For more details on class-free components, check out "Baby's First Reaction: A 'Hello, World' Example for React".

@troutowicz
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@Cmdv @svagi

You may be insterested in react-stampit. It's a specialized stampit factory for React, kind of similar to React.creatClass.

@voronianski
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I've noticed a strange behavior when using these patterns, for example with parasitic component (see a render method):

import React from 'react';

function createComponent (component) {
    return function (props, context) {
        let instance = new React.Component(props, context);

        instance.state = component.state;
        instance.render = component.render;

        return instance;
    };
}

let App = createComponent({
    state: {
        count: 0
    },

    render() {
        let { state, setState } = this;
        return <div onClick={() => {
            // setState({count: ++state.count});
            // this will throw exception: 
            // "Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read property '_reactInternalInstance' of undefined at ReactInstanceMap.js:34" 

            this.setState({count: ++state.count}); // this line works fine
        }}>Counter: {state.count}!</div>;
    }
});

React.render(
    <App />,
    document.getElementById('app')
);

As you see onClick calling setState reference throws an exception in React, though using this.setState works fine..

Ideally what I'm looking for is to patch render with arguments: render({ props, state }, setState) inside my createComponent function in order to avoid annoying this in methods.

@ericelliott
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You need react-stampit

@emekaokoli
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emekaokoli commented Dec 21, 2016

@ericelliott why cant i do this:
PS: im new to JS/React

`import React from 'react';

function AwesomeComponent(props){
AwesomeComponent = Object.assign(Object.create(React.Component.prototype))
AwesomeComponent.props = props
AwesomeComponent.state = {likesCount : 0};
this.onLike = this.onLike.bind(this); // LINE 7

onLike ()
let newLikesCount = this.state.likesCount + 1;
this.setState({likesCount: newLikesCount});

AwesomeComponent.render = function() {
return (


Likes : {this.state.likesCount}
Like Me


);
}

}

export default AwesomeComponent;`

this error probably starts at line 7.

Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read property 'onLike' of undefined
at AwesomeComponent (AwesomeComponent.jsx:7)
at ReactCompositeComponent.js:306
at measureLifeCyclePerf (ReactCompositeComponent.js:75)
at ReactCompositeComponentWrapper._constructComponentWithoutOwner (ReactCompositeComponent.js:305)
at ReactCompositeComponentWrapper._constructComponent (ReactCompositeComponent.js:280)
at ReactCompositeComponentWrapper.mountComponent (ReactCompositeComponent.js:188)
at Object.mountComponent (ReactReconciler.js:46)
at ReactDOMComponent.mountChildren (ReactMultiChild.js:238)
at ReactDOMComponent._createInitialChildren (ReactDOMComponent.js:691)
at ReactDOMComponent.mountComponent (ReactDOMComponent.js:516)

@xgqfrms-GitHub
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good job!

Alternative ways to define react Components

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ghost commented Sep 24, 2022

great idea.

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