/deact

a repository for learning about React's innards. WIP.

Primary LanguageJavaScript

Deact

React under the hood

Please note that this project is in its infancy. The slide deck and curriculum are far from completed.

what

This repository is for those looking to learn how React works under the hood.

The curriculum assumes a familiarity with Javascript, React and git.

structure

Lessons are split up into branches. Lesson x.0 contains the answer key - for example, branch 2.0-static-render-dom contains the answer key for Lesson 2, static-render-dom.

I am working on making branching checkpoints inside of lessons, so you can follow along by checking out x.1, x.2, etc, but this is incomplete.

how

Run the following command at project root to track all remote branches, which are used as "chapters":

git branch -a | grep -v HEAD | perl -ne 'chomp($_); s|^\*?\s*||; if (m|(.+)/(.+)| && not $d{$2}) {print qq(git branch --track $2 $1/$2\n)} else {$d{$_}=1}' | csh -xfs

then run yarn install.

Follow along with this slide deck. You will be prompted when it is time to start coding.

Lessons are generally in a test-driven fashion: for each lesson, you will have a suite of tests that you must pass. However, some branches are simply examples.

Once all tests are passing in a suite, you will have built a new piece of Deact. Run yarn devserver to see the fruits of your labor in a browser.

This is based on React's stack reconciler. This implementation has been overhauled with React Fiber, but the concepts are similar.

Table of Contents

1. The Anatomy of an Element

2. DOMComponent

  • 2.1: blank slate
  • 2.2:
    • create DOM elements by type
    • set HTML attributes from props
  • 2.3:
    • mount string literal children inside a < span />
    • render and attach child elements
  • 2.4:
    • render() method: attach a DOM node to container node, like ReactDOM.render()

3. instantiateComponent()

  • 3.1: blank slate
  • 3.2: build the instantiateComponent() method
  • 3.3: use instantiateComponent() in DOMComponent

4. CompositeComponent

  • 4.1: blank slate
  • 4.2: mounting functional components
  • 4.3: mounting class components
  • 4.4: calling componentWillMount() before rendering class components