Events

Differences from HTML

  • camelCase events, rather than lowercase

  • pass a function as the event handler, rather than a string

<!-- HTML -->
<button onclick="activateLasers()">
  Activate Lasers
</button>

becomes

//React
<button onClick={activateLasers}>
  Activate Lasers
</button>

PreventDefault

call preventDefault rather then return false

<!-- HTML -->
<a href="#" onclick="console.log('The link was clicked.'); return false">
  Click me
</a>

becomes

//React
function ActionLink() {
  function handleClick(e) {
    e.preventDefault();
    console.log('The link was clicked.');
  }

  return (
    <a href="#" onClick={handleClick}>
      Click me
    </a>
  );
}

e is a synthetic event handling cross-browser compat

Usage

Pass functions into event handlers

  • use event.persist(); if you access async because react event objects are recycled so could be different

class Toggle extends React.Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);
    this.state = {isToggleOn: true};

    // This binding is necessary to make `this` work in the callback
    this.handleClick = this.handleClick.bind(this);
  }

  handleClick() {
    this.setState(prevState => ({
      isToggleOn: !prevState.isToggleOn
    }));
  }

  render() {
    return (
      <button onClick={this.handleClick}>
        {this.state.isToggleOn ? 'ON' : 'OFF'}
      </button>
    );
  }
}

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

Bind()

[method].bind(this) is a vanilla JS function that sets the this ptr of the function to the arg passed needed when passing ft like in callbacks rather than calling it

Generally, if you refer to a method without () after it, such as onClick={this.handleClick}, you should bind that method.

Not using bind()?

class LoggingButton extends React.Component {
  // This syntax ensures `this` is bound within handleClick.
  // Warning: this is *experimental* syntax.
  handleClick = () => {
    console.log('this is:', this);
  }

  render() {
    return (
      <button onClick={this.handleClick}>
        Click me
      </button>
    );
  }
}

Passing arg to Event Handler

<button onClick={(e) => this.deleteRow(id, e)}>Delete Row</button>
<button onClick={this.deleteRow.bind(this, id)}>Delete Row</button>

Equivalent using arrow fts and bind respectively, e will be 2nd arg in both

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