- Create components that return JSX
- Use props to make components dynamic
- Transform lists of data into lists of components
Now that you've learned how to work with components in React, it's time to build something and put those skills to use! Your goal for this lab is to make a static site in React to practice building components, writing JSX, and passing down data as props.
We'll be creating a personal blog site, similar to Dan Abramov's Overreacted:
There is some starter code available in src/components/App.js
. There is also
some data in data/blog.js
that is being imported into App
so you can pass it
down to the components that need it.
Have a look at the components below and draw out a component hierarchy so you can determine how to pass data down as props.
Make a Header
component as a child of App
. It should return:
- a
<header>
element with the following elements inside:- an
<h1>
with the name of the blog, passed as a prop calledname
- an
Make an About
component as a child of App
. It should return:
- an
<aside>
element with the following elements inside:- an
<img>
element, with thesrc
set to an image passed as a prop calledimage
- the
<img>
element should use this placeholder image as a default value for the prop if no prop is passed in: "https://via.placeholder.com/215" - the image should also be accessible! Give it an
alt
attribute of "blog logo" - a
<p>
element, with the text for the blog passed in as a prop calledabout
- an
Make an ArticleList
component as a child of App
. It should return:
- a
<main>
element with the following components inside:- an array of
Article
components (one component for each post passed down as a prop calledpost
toArticleList
) - make sure to assign a unique
key
prop to eachArticle
- an array of
Make an Article
component as a child of ArticleList
. It should return:
- an
<article>
element, with the following elements inside:- an
<h3>
element displaying the title of the article, passed as a prop calledtitle
- a
<small>
element displaying the date of the article, passed as a prop calleddate
- a default value of "January 1, 1970" should be used if no date is passed as a prop
- a
<p>
element displaying the preview of the article, passed as a prop calledpreview
- an
You'll notice in the original Overreacted site, there's a 'minutes to read' indicator next to each article.
If the article takes less than 30 minutes to read:
- For every 5 minutes (rounded up to the nearest 5), display a coffee cup emoji. For example, if the article takes 3 minutes to read, you should display "☕️ 3 min read". If the article takes 7 minute, you should display "☕️☕️ 7 min read".
If the article takes 30 minutes or longer to read:
- For every 10 minutes (rounded up to the nearest 10), display a bento box emoji. For example, if the article takes 35 minutes to read, you should display "🍱🍱🍱🍱 35 min read". If the article takes 61 minutes to read, you should display "🍱🍱🍱🍱🍱🍱🍱 61 min read".
There aren't tests for this feature, so you'll have to rely on running the code in the browser to see if your implementation works!