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Full-Stack Flask and React

You're reading from  Full-Stack Flask and React

Product type Book
Published in Oct 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803248448
Pages 408 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Author (1):
Olatunde Adedeji Olatunde Adedeji
Profile icon Olatunde Adedeji

Table of Contents (21) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1 – Frontend Development with React
2. Chapter 1: Getting Full Stack Ready with React and Flask 3. Chapter 2: Getting Started with React 4. Chapter 3: Managing State with React Hooks 5. Chapter 4: Fetching Data with React APIs 6. Chapter 5: JSX and Displaying Lists in React 7. Chapter 6: Working with React Router and Forms 8. Chapter 7: React Unit Testing 9. Part 2 – Backend Development with Flask
10. Chapter 8: SQL and Data Modeling 11. Chapter 9: API Development and Documentation 12. Chapter 10: Integrating the React Frontend with the Flask Backend 13. Chapter 11: Fetching and Displaying Data in a React-Flask Application 14. Chapter 12: Authentication and Authorization 15. Chapter 13: Error Handling 16. Chapter 14: Modular Architecture – Harnessing the Power of Blueprints 17. Chapter 15: Flask Unit Testing 18. Chapter 16: Containerization and Flask Application Deployment 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Arrow functions in React

Arrow functions provide a more concise and readable syntax for defining functions in JavaScript. Arrow functions have become a widely used feature in React development for obvious reasons: shorter syntax and implicit return. You will have a better understanding of what these mean in a moment.

In traditional JavaScript, you would have to define a regular function that adds two numbers together like this:

function addNumbers(a, b) {    return a + b;
}

Not bad, right? But arrow functions can make this even simpler and more elegant. Check this out:

const addNumbers = (a, b) => {    return a + b;
};

Pretty cool? The function keyword is replaced with a funky-looking arrow, =>, and you can omit the curly braces and the return statement if your function is just a one-liner:

const addNumbers = (a, b) => a + b;

Basically, you define arrow functions by following this syntax rule:

const functionName...
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