I developed with React for months without fully understanding the real power of the React component model. One day I decided to dive into composition, and this is what I learned.
In React, a component can have one, many, or no children. Great, but wait — what are "children"? Let's explain with an example:
<Profile> <ProfileImage src="/asset/profile-img.png" /> <ProfileDetails name="Antonello" surname="Zanini" /> </Profile>
The Profile component has two children: ProfileImage and ProfileDetails, while these two have no children.
"In JSX expressions that contain both an opening tag and a closing tag, the content between those tags is passed as a special prop: props.children" — React documentation
Essentially, props.children is a special prop, automatically passed to every component, that can be used to render the content included between the opening and closing tags when invoking a component. These kinds of components are identified by the official documentation as "boxes".
In React's JSX, a component with children is always identified by an opening tag and a closing tag. Each child must be placed between these two tags, just as we have seen above. When a component has no children, you can invoke it with either
Let's assume that we want to create an ImageSlider component. Our goal is to invoke the component just like this:
<ImageSlider> <img src="/assets/img-1.pg" /> <img src="/assets/img-2.pg" /> <img src="/assets/img-3.pg" /> </ImageSlider>
As you can see, ImageSlider is composed of several which can be accessed and rendered through props.children.
export default function ImageSlider(props) { return ( <div className="img-slider"> {props.children} </div> ); }
Thanks to props.children we can nest our content inside a component, just like we nest common HTML elements.
The content passed to a component through props.children can include
undefined, null, a Boolean, a number, a string, a React element, or an array of any of these types recursively. It can also be a function returning one of these types.
Please note that, as mentioned in the React documentation, false, null, undefined, and true are valid children, but they will be ignored and not rendered. If you want false, true, null, or undefined to be rendered, you must first convert it to a string:
<MyComponent> { String(undefined) } </MyComponent>
props.children allows us to compose components, and therefore our front-end interface as a consequence; harnessing the real power of the React component model.
"React has a powerful composition model, and we recommend using composition instead of inheritance to reuse code between components." — React documentation
As covered in the official documentation, you might sometimes need to fill multiple "holes" in a component. In such cases, instead of using props.children, defining multiple custom props may be the preferable approach; as shown in the following example:
function SplitPane(props) { const { left, right } = props return ( <div className="split-pane"> <div className="left-pane"> { left } </div> <div className="right-pane"> { right } </div> </div> ); }
"React.Children provides utilities for dealing with the props.children opaque data structure" — React documentation
Why is props.children an "opaque data structure"?
Because props.children can consist of one, many, or no child elements, which means that its value can be a single child node, an array of child nodes, or undefined respectively. Thanks to the React.Children API we can easily deal with props.children without taking each of its possible types into account. Thankfully, everything will be handled for us in the background.
At the time of writing, React.Children offers five different utilities:
map
forEach
count
only
toArray
Let's see how we can use React.Children with an example. Let's say we want to add the special CSS class img-special-class to each of the children of the ImageSlider component. This can be done as follows:
export default function ImageSlider(props) { const { children } = props return ( <div className="img-slider"> { React.Children.map(children, (child) => React.cloneElement(child, { className: `${child.props.className} img-special-class` }) ) } </div> ); }
React.Children.map allows us to iterate over props.children and transform each element according to the function passed as the second parameter. To achieve our goal, we used React.cloneElement. This is because we needed to change the value of the className prop, but props are immutable in React, so we had to clone each child.
Mastering props.children is essential to becoming a great React developer and beginning to harness the full potential of the React component model. props.children is one of React's most useful features, since it gives us the ability to render child components. Because of this, every developer should know how to use it properly.
I hope this article helps you master composition in React.
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