Sunday, August 11, 2019

ReactJS - Component Life Cycle

In this chapter, we will discuss component lifecycle methods.

Lifecycle Methods

  • componentWillMount is executed before rendering, on both the server and the client side.
  • componentDidMount is executed after the first render only on the client side. This is where AJAX requests and DOM or state updates should occur. This method is also used for integration with other JavaScript frameworks and any functions with delayed execution such as setTimeout or setInterval. We are using it to update the state so we can trigger the other lifecycle methods.
  • componentWillReceiveProps is invoked as soon as the props are updated before another render is called. We triggered it from setNewNumber when we updated the state.
  • shouldComponentUpdate should return true or false value. This will determine if the component will be updated or not. This is set to true by default. If you are sure that the component doesn't need to render after state or props are updated, you can return false value.
  • componentWillUpdate is called just before rendering.
  • componentDidUpdate is called just after rendering.
  • componentWillUnmount is called after the component is unmounted from the dom. We are unmounting our component in main.js.
In the following example, we will set the initial state in the constructor function. The setNewnumber is used to update the state. All the lifecycle methods are inside the Content component.

App.jsx

import React from 'react';

class App extends React.Component {
   constructor(props) {
      super(props);
      
      this.state = {
         data: 0
      }
      this.setNewNumber = this.setNewNumber.bind(this)
   };
   setNewNumber() {
      this.setState({data: this.state.data + 1})
   }
   render() {
      return (
         <div>
            <button onClick = {this.setNewNumber}>INCREMENT</button>
            <Content myNumber = {this.state.data}></Content>
         </div>
      );
   }
}
class Content extends React.Component {
   componentWillMount() {
      console.log('Component WILL MOUNT!')
   }
   componentDidMount() {
      console.log('Component DID MOUNT!')
   }
   componentWillReceiveProps(newProps) {    
      console.log('Component WILL RECIEVE PROPS!')
   }
   shouldComponentUpdate(newProps, newState) {
      return true;
   }
   componentWillUpdate(nextProps, nextState) {
      console.log('Component WILL UPDATE!');
   }
   componentDidUpdate(prevProps, prevState) {
      console.log('Component DID UPDATE!')
   }
   componentWillUnmount() {
      console.log('Component WILL UNMOUNT!')
   }
   render() {
      return (
         <div>
            <h3>{this.props.myNumber}</h3>
         </div>
      );
   }
}
export default App;

main.js

import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import App from './App.jsx';

ReactDOM.render(<App/>, document.getElementById('app'));

setTimeout(() => {
   ReactDOM.unmountComponentAtNode(document.getElementById('app'));}, 10000);
After the initial render, we will get the following screen.
React Component Lifecycle Initial Screen

No comments:

Post a Comment

Lab 09: Publish and subscribe to Event Grid events

  Microsoft Azure user interface Given the dynamic nature of Microsoft cloud tools, you might experience Azure UI changes that occur after t...