What is React?
React is an open-source frontend JavaScript library which is used for building user interfaces especially for single page applications. It is used for handling view layer for web and mobile apps. React was created by Jordan Walke, a software engineer working for Facebook. React was first deployed on Facebook's News Feed in 2011 and on Instagram in 2012.
What are the major features of React?
The major features of React are:
- It uses VirtualDOM instead RealDOM considering that RealDOM manipulations are expensive.
- Supports server-side rendering.
- Follows Unidirectional data flow or data binding.
- Uses reusable/composable UI components to develop the view.
What is JSX?
JSX is a XML-like syntax extension to ECMAScript (the acronym stands for JavaScript XML). Basically it just provides syntactic sugar for the React.createElement()
function, giving us expressiveness of JavaScript along with HTML like template syntax.
In the example below text inside <h1>
tag return as JavaScript function to the render function.
class App extends React.Component {render() {return(<div><h1>{'Welcome to React world!'}</h1></div>)}}
What is the difference between Element and Component?
An Element is a plain object describing what you want to appear on the screen in terms of the DOM nodes or other components. Elements can contain other Elements in their props. Creating a React element is cheap. Once an element is created, it is never mutated.
The object representation of React Element would be as follows:
const element = React.createElement('div',{id: 'login-btn'},'Login')
The above React.createElement()
function returns an object:
{type: 'div',props: {children: 'Login',id: 'login-btn'}}
And finally it renders to the DOM using ReactDOM.render()
:
<div id='login-btn'>Login</div>
Whereas a component can be declared in several different ways. It can be a class with a render()
method. Alternatively, in simple cases, it can be defined as a function. In either case, it takes props as an input, and returns a JSX tree as the output:
const Button = ({ onLogin }) =><div id={'login-btn'} onClick={onLogin}>Login</div>
Then JSX gets transpiled to a React.createElement()
function tree:
const Button = ({ onLogin }) => React.createElement('div',{ id: 'login-btn', onClick: onLogin },'Login')
What are Pure Components?
React.PureComponent
is exactly the same as React.Component
except that it handles the shouldComponentUpdate()
method for you. When props or state changes, PureComponent will do a shallow comparison on both props and state. Component on the other hand won't compare current props and state to next out of the box. Thus, the component will re-render by default whenever shouldComponentUpdate
is called.