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160 lines
5.0 KiB
Markdown
160 lines
5.0 KiB
Markdown
---
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id: transferring-props
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title: Transferring Props
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permalink: transferring-props.html
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prev: reusable-components.html
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next: forms.html
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---
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It's a common pattern in React to wrap a component in an abstraction. The outer component exposes a simple property to do something that might have more complex implementation details.
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You can use [JSX spread attributes](/react/docs/jsx-spread.html) to merge the old props with additional values:
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```javascript
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return <Component {...this.props} more="values" />;
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```
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If you don't use JSX, you can use any object helper such as ES6 `Object.assign` or Underscore `_.extend`:
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```javascript
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return Component(Object.assign({}, this.props, { more: 'values' }));
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```
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The rest of this tutorial explains best practices. It uses JSX and experimental ES7 syntax.
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## Manual Transfer
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Most of the time you should explicitly pass the properties down. That ensures that you only exposes a subset of the inner API, one that you know will work.
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```javascript
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var FancyCheckbox = React.createClass({
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render: function() {
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var fancyClass = this.props.checked ? 'FancyChecked' : 'FancyUnchecked';
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return (
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<div className={fancyClass} onClick={this.props.onClick}>
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{this.props.children}
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</div>
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);
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}
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});
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React.render(
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<FancyCheckbox checked={true} onClick={console.log.bind(console)}>
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Hello world!
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</FancyCheckbox>,
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document.body
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);
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```
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But what about the `name` prop? Or the `title` prop? Or `onMouseOver`?
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## Transferring with `...` in JSX
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Sometimes it's fragile and tedious to pass every property along. In that case you can use [destructuring assignment](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Destructuring_assignment) with rest properties to extract a set of unknown properties.
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List out all the properties that you would like to consume, followed by `...other`.
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```javascript
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var { checked, ...other } = this.props;
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```
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This ensures that you pass down all the props EXCEPT the ones you're consuming yourself.
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```javascript
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var FancyCheckbox = React.createClass({
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render: function() {
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var { checked, ...other } = this.props;
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var fancyClass = checked ? 'FancyChecked' : 'FancyUnchecked';
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// `other` contains { onClick: console.log } but not the checked property
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return (
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<div {...other} className={fancyClass} />
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);
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}
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});
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React.render(
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<FancyCheckbox checked={true} onClick={console.log.bind(console)}>
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Hello world!
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</FancyCheckbox>,
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document.body
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);
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```
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> NOTE:
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>
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> In the example above, the `checked` prop is also a valid DOM attribute. If you didn't use destructuring in this way you might inadvertently pass it along.
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Always use the destructuring pattern when transferring unknown `other` props.
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```javascript
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var FancyCheckbox = React.createClass({
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render: function() {
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var fancyClass = this.props.checked ? 'FancyChecked' : 'FancyUnchecked';
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// ANTI-PATTERN: `checked` would be passed down to the inner component
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return (
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<div {...this.props} className={fancyClass} />
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);
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}
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});
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```
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## Consuming and Transferring the Same Prop
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If your component wants to consume a property but also pass it along, you can repass it explicitly `checked={checked}`. This is preferable to passing the full `this.props` object since it's easier to refactor and lint.
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```javascript
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var FancyCheckbox = React.createClass({
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render: function() {
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var { checked, title, ...other } = this.props;
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var fancyClass = checked ? 'FancyChecked' : 'FancyUnchecked';
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var fancyTitle = checked ? 'X ' + title : 'O ' + title;
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return (
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<label>
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<input {...other}
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checked={checked}
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className={fancyClass}
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type="checkbox"
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/>
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{fancyTitle}
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</label>
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);
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}
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});
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```
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> NOTE:
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>
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> Order matters. By putting the `{...other}` before your JSX props you ensure that the consumer of your component can't override them. In the example above we have guaranteed that the input will be of type `"checkbox"`.
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## Rest and Spread Properties `...`
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Rest properties allow you to extract the remaining properties from an object into a new object. It excludes every other property listed in the destructuring pattern.
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This is an experimental implementation of an [ES7 proposal](https://github.com/sebmarkbage/ecmascript-rest-spread).
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```javascript
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var { x, y, ...z } = { x: 1, y: 2, a: 3, b: 4 };
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x; // 1
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y; // 2
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z; // { a: 3, b: 4 }
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```
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> Note:
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>
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> Use the [JSX command-line tool](http://npmjs.org/package/react-tools) with the `--harmony` flag to activate the experimental ES7 syntax.
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## Transferring with Underscore
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If you don't use JSX, you can use a library to achieve the same pattern. Underscore supports `_.omit` to filter out properties and `_.extend` to copy properties onto a new object.
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```javascript
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var FancyCheckbox = React.createClass({
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render: function() {
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var checked = this.props.checked;
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var other = _.omit(this.props, 'checked');
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var fancyClass = checked ? 'FancyChecked' : 'FancyUnchecked';
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return (
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React.DOM.div(_.extend({}, other, { className: fancyClass }))
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);
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}
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});
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```
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