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Learn React with TypeScript - Second Edition

You're reading from  Learn React with TypeScript - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804614204
Pages 474 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Carl Rippon Carl Rippon
Profile icon Carl Rippon

Table of Contents (19) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction
2. Chapter 1: Introducing React 3. Chapter 2: Introducing TypeScript 4. Chapter 3: Setting Up React and TypeScript 5. Chapter 4: Using React Hooks 6. Part 2: App Fundamentals
7. Chapter 5: Approaches to Styling React Frontends 8. Chapter 6: Routing with React Router 9. Chapter 7: Working with Forms 10. Part 3: Data
11. Chapter 8: State Management 12. Chapter 9: Interacting with RESTful APIs 13. Chapter 10: Interacting with GraphQL APIs 14. Part 4: Advanced React
15. Chapter 11: Reusable Components 16. Chapter 12: Unit Testing with Jest and React Testing Library 17. Index 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

We now understand that React is a popular library for creating component-based frontends. In this chapter, we created an alert component using React.

Component output is declared using a mix of HTML and JavaScript called JSX. JSX needs to be transpiled into JavaScript before it can be executed in a browser.

Props can be passed into a component as JSX attributes. This allows consumers of the component to control its output and behavior. A component receives props as an object parameter. The JSX attribute names form the object parameter property names. We implemented a range of props in this chapter in the alert component.

Events can be handled to execute logic when the user interacts with the component. We created an event handler for the close button click event in the alert component.

State can be used to re-render a component and update its output. State is defined using the useState hook. State is often updated in event handlers. We have created state for whether the alert is visible.

Custom events can be implemented as a function prop. This allows consumers of the component to execute logic as the user interacts with it. We implemented a close event on the alert component.

In the next chapter, we will introduce ourselves to TypeScript.

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