BONUS: React Forms Abstraction
Learning Goals
- Make our form logic more reusable by creating a dynamic
onChangeevent handler
Code Along
If you want to code along there is starter code in the src folder. Make sure
to run npm install && npm start to see the code in the browser.
Form State
Let's talk about the onChange event we've got set up now in initial version of
our Form component. If we look at the original code:
import React, { useState } from "react";
function Form() {
const [firstName, setFirstName] = useState("John");
const [lastName, setLastName] = useState("Henry");
function handleFirstNameChange(event) {
setFirstName(event.target.value);
}
function handleLastNameChange(event) {
setLastName(event.target.value);
}
return (
<form>
<input type="text" onChange={handleFirstNameChange} value={firstName} />
<input type="text" onChange={handleLastNameChange} value={lastName} />
<button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>
);
}
export default Form;We can imagine that adding more input fields to this form is going to get repetitive pretty fast. For every new input field, we'd need to add:
- a new state variable by calling
useState()to hold the value of that input - a new
handleChangefunction to update that piece of state
As a first refactor, let's use useState just once, and make an object
representing all of our input fields:
function Form() {
const [formData, setFormData] = useState({
firstName: "John",
lastName: "Henry",
});
function handleFirstNameChange(event) {
setFormData({
...formData,
firstName: event.target.value,
});
}
function handleLastNameChange(event) {
setFormData({
...formData,
lastName: event.target.value,
});
}
return (
<form>
<input
type="text"
onChange={handleFirstNameChange}
value={formData.firstName}
/>
<input
type="text"
onChange={handleLastNameChange}
value={formData.lastName}
/>
</form>
);
}Since our initial state is an object, we have to copy all the key/value pairs from the current version of that object into our new state — that's what this spread operator here is doing:
setFormData({
// formData is an object, so we need to copy all the key/value pairs
...formData,
// we want to overwrite the lastName key with a new value
lastName: event.target.value,
});Now, we just have one object in state to update whenever a the input field changes.
Our change handlers are still a bit verbose, however. Since each one is changing a different value in our state, we've got them separated here. You can imagine that once we've got a more complicated form, this route may result in a very cluttered component.
Instead of writing separate function for each input field, we could actually
condense this down into one more reusable function. Since event is being
passed in as the argument, we have access to some of the event.target
attributes that may be present.
If we give our inputs name attributes, we can access them as event.target.name:
<input
type="text"
name="firstName"
value={formData.firstName}
onChange={handleFirstNameChange}
/>
<input
type="text"
name="lastName"
value={formData.lastName}
onChange={handleLastNameChange}
/>If we make sure the name attributes of our <input> fields match keys in our
state, we can write a generic handleChange function like so:
function handleChange(event) {
// name is the KEY in of the formData object we're trying to update
const name = event.target.name;
const value = event.target.value;
setFormData({
...formData,
[name]: value,
});
}If we connect this function to both of our inputs, they will both correctly
update state. Why? Because for the first input, event.target.name is set to
firstName, while in the second input, it is set to lastName. Each
input's name attribute will change which part of state is actually updated!
Now, if we want to add a new input field to the form, we just need to add two things:
- a new key in our
formDatastate, and - a new
<input>field where thenameattribute matches our new key
We can take it one step further, and also handle checkbox inputs in our
handleChange input. Since checkboxes have a checked attribute instead of the
value attribute, here's what we'd need to check what type our input is in
order to get the correct value in state.
Here's what the final version of our Form component looks like:
import React, { useState } from "react";
function Form() {
const [formData, setFormData] = useState({
firstName: "John",
lastName: "Henry",
admin: false,
});
function handleChange(event) {
const name = event.target.name;
let value = event.target.value;
// use `checked` property of checkboxes instead of `value`
if (event.target.type === "checkbox") {
value = event.target.checked;
}
setFormData({
...formData,
[name]: value,
});
}
function handleSubmit(event) {
event.preventDefault();
console.log(formData);
}
return (
<form onSubmit={handleSubmit}>
<input
type="text"
name="firstName"
onChange={handleChange}
value={formData.firstName}
/>
<input
type="text"
name="lastName"
onChange={handleChange}
value={formData.lastName}
/>
<input
type="checkbox"
name="admin"
onChange={handleChange}
checked={formData.admin}
/>
<button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>
);
}Depending on what input elements you're working with, you might also have to add
some additional logic to handle things like number fields (using parseInt or
parseFloat) and other data types to ensure your form state is always in sync
with your components.
Conclusion
Working with controlled forms in React involves writing a lot of boilerplate code. We can abstract away some of that boilerplate by making our change handling logic more abstract.
Note: Working with complex forms can get quite challenging! If you're using a lot of forms in your application, it's worth checking out some nice React libraries like react hook form to handle some of this abstraction, as well as adding custom client-side validation to your forms.