/react-hooks

Learn React Hooks! 🎣 βš›

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There are better patterns and practices that are an entirely new approach to developing components and managing state in your React applications.

Learn the ins and outs of React Hooks. I will take you on a deep dive into React Hooks, and show you what you need to know to start using them in your applications right away.

Learn React from Start to Finish

Build Status AppVeyor Build Status GPL 3.0 License Code of Conduct

Prerequisites

System Requirements

  • git v2.13 or greater
  • NodeJS ^10.13 || 12 || 14
  • npm v6 or greater

All of these must be available in your PATH. To verify things are set up properly, you can run this:

git --version
node --version
npm --version

If you have trouble with any of these, learn more about the PATH environment variable and how to fix it here for windows or mac/linux.

Setup

If you want to commit and push your work as you go, you'll want to fork first and then clone your fork rather than this repo directly.

After you've made sure to have the correct things (and versions) installed, you should be able to just run a few commands to get set up:

git clone https://github.com/kentcdodds/react-hooks.git
cd react-hooks
node setup

This may take a few minutes. It will ask you for your email. This is optional and just automatically adds your email to the links in the project to make filling out some forms easier.

If you get any errors, please read through them and see if you can find out what the problem is. If you can't work it out on your own then please file an issue and provide all the output from the commands you ran (even if it's a lot).

If you can't get the setup script to work, then just make sure you have the right versions of the requirements listed above, and run the following commands:

npm install
npm run validate

It's recommended you run everything locally in the same environment you work in every day, but if you're having issues getting things set up, you can also set this up using GitHub Codespaces (video demo) or Codesandbox.

Running the app

To get the app up and running (and really see if it worked), run:

npm start

This should start up your browser. If you're familiar, this is a standard react-scripts application.

You can also open the deployment of the app on Netlify.

Running the tests

npm test

This will start Jest in watch mode. Read the output and play around with it. The tests are there to help you reach the final version, however sometimes you can accomplish the task and the tests still fail if you implement things differently than I do in my solution, so don't look to them as a complete authority.

Exercises

  • src/exercise/00.md: Background, Exercise Instructions, Extra Credit
  • src/exercise/00.js: Exercise with Emoji helpers
  • src/__tests__/00.js: Tests
  • src/final/00.js: Final version
  • src/final/00.extra-0.js: Final version of extra credit

The purpose of the exercise is not for you to work through all the material. It's intended to get your brain thinking about the right questions to ask me as I walk through the material.

Helpful Emoji 🐨 πŸ’ͺ 🏁 πŸ’° πŸ’― πŸ¦‰ πŸ“œ πŸ’£ πŸ‘¨β€πŸ’Ό 🚨

Each exercise has comments in it to help you get through the exercise. These fun emoji characters are here to help you.

  • Kody the Koala 🐨 will tell you when there's something specific you should do
  • Matthew the Muscle πŸ’ͺ will indicate what you're working with an exercise
  • Chuck the Checkered Flag 🏁 will indicate that you're working with a final version
  • Marty the Money Bag πŸ’° will give you specific tips (and sometimes code) along the way
  • Hannah the Hundred πŸ’― will give you extra challenges you can do if you finish the exercises early.
  • Olivia the Owl πŸ¦‰ will give you useful tidbits/best practice notes and a link for elaboration and feedback.
  • Dominic the Document πŸ“œ will give you links to useful documentation
  • Berry the Bomb πŸ’£ will be hanging around anywhere you need to blow stuff up (delete code)
  • Peter the Product Manager πŸ‘¨β€πŸ’Ό helps us know what our users want
  • Alfred the Alert 🚨 will occasionally show up in the test failures with potential explanations for why the tests are failing.

Contributors

Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):


Kent C. Dodds

πŸ’» πŸ“– πŸš‡ ⚠️

Tyler Nieman

πŸ’» πŸ“–

Mike Plis

πŸ’» ⚠️

Justin Dorfman

πŸ”

Carlos PΓ©rez GutiΓ©rrez

πŸ’»

Charlie Stras

πŸ“– πŸ’»

Lide

πŸ“–

Marco Moretti

πŸ’»

Watchmaker

πŸ›

Daniel Chapman

πŸ’»

flofehrenbacher

πŸ“–

Pritam Sangani

πŸ’»

Emmanouil Zoumpoulakis

πŸ“–

Peter HozΓ‘k

πŸ’»

Timo

πŸ“–

Thacher Hussain

πŸ“–

Johnny Magrippis

πŸ’»

Apola Kipso

πŸ’»

Markus Lasermann

⚠️

Stijn Geens

πŸ“–

Adeildo Amorim

πŸ“–

Greg Sheppard

πŸ“–

Rafael D. Hernandez

πŸ’»

Dallas Carraher

πŸ“–

Roni Castro

⚠️

This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!

Workshop Feedback

Each exercise has an Elaboration and Feedback link. Please fill that out after the exercise and instruction.

At the end of the workshop, please go to this URL to give overall feedback. Thank you! https://kcd.im/rh-ws-feedback