- Practice writing dynamic components
- Practice jumping into existing code and making the necessary changes
In this lab, you'll write React components and render them dynamically based on information they receive from their parent components. This will enable us to use components as templates with the ability to render variable content.
There are two discrete parts of this lab, and they should be tackled one after
the other. We will need to first create a Comment
component from scratch and
then add a few things to the ColorBox
component.
All of the css has been provided, as well as a good amount of starter code. The
general structure has already been provided - you are to pick up where the code
leaves off and make both the Comment
and the ColorBox
components behave
dynamically.
Here is an image of what we want once we are finished, complete with a view of the rendered DOM tree on the right:
...and here is a tree view of our component parent-child structure:
└── App
├── BlogPost
│ ├── Comment
│ ├── Comment
│ └── Comment
│
└── ColorBox
└── ColorBox
└── ColorBox
└── ColorBox (etc.)
Go ahead and npm start
to see what we already have rendering in the browser.
(The application will error on npm start
until the Comment
component is
created and exported)
- Create a
Component
component in the file,Comment.js
withinsrc/
and don't forget to:import React, { Component } from 'react'
at the top of our file- Use the
class X extends Component {}
syntax - export the class so it can be used in other files
- import the class in
BlogPost
- It should expect a single prop (the text of a comment), which can be used in the
component via:
this.props.commentText
. This prop is passed insrc/BlogPost.js
- It should have a single
<div>
in itsrender()
method - The
<div>
should have aclassName="comment"
attribute - Note: The
BlogPost
component needs minor alteration to properly pass the contents of itscommentsArray
to each of theComment
components that it is rendering - Don't forget - we can unpack variable values directly with JSX by wrapping them
in
{}
, i.e.{this.props.commentText}
- Look at something other than your computer screen for at least five minutes
- Should expect a single prop (an opacity value), which can be used in the
component via:
this.props.opacity
. This prop is first passed insrc/App.js
- If the opacity value is greater than or equal to 0.2:
- the
ColorBox
component should render anotherColorBox
itself (recursive components!) - an opacity prop should be passed to the child
- the passed opacity prop should be reduced by 0.1
- the
- If the opacity value is less than 0.2:
- do not render another
ColorBox
(or else we would have infiniteColorBoxes
rendering!) - instead, the render method should return
null
- do not render another
- Watch out for endless recursion! If your
ColorBox
component has no break condition to stop it from always rendering anotherColorBox
, your browser will likely become non-responsive. pre-plan how you are going to render theColorBox
before trying to code it. - You may find that subtracting 0.1 from your opacity prop is leading to some strange precision errors (try logging the opacity prop with each render). This is due to limitations with JavaScript float (number) types.
- In order to render based on a conditional, you can write JavaScript logic
directly in the
render()
block. In the example below, therender()
method is returning the evaluation of a ternary operator. If the expressionthis.props.value > 100
evaluates to be true, the entire ternary expression (and thus, the return value ofrender()
) evaluates to be null, otherwise,render()
will return some JSX.
import React, { Component } from 'react';
export default class Example extends Component {
render() {
const newValue = this.props.value * 2;
return this.props.value > 100 ? null : ( <div>
<Example value={newValue} />
</div>)
}
}
View Dynamic Components Lab on Learn.co and start learning to code for free.