Let's build something small to reinforce what you've learned so far. We're going to practice creating components and passing information into them.
We'll build a simple website that shows title and runtime information about the original Lord of the Rings Trilogy.
Specifically, at the end of this lab, your solution will look like this:
Create a new react app called lord-of-the-rings
:
Inside of ./src
folder, create a new React Component file called Movie.js
.
Add some JSX to the render function so this component will be visible in our application. Let's keep the JSX simple for now, and we'll make it more complex once we're sure it works.
Remember, our goal is to display the movie title and
runtime information. Let's add one <h1>
for the movie title, and a <p>
for the runtime.
Open src/App.js
.
Add the <Movie />
component just after the paragraph. Go back to the
app and see if it appears.
Uh oh. There's an error.
Failed to compile
./src/App.js
Line 15: 'Movie' is not defined react/jsx-no-undef
'Movie'
is not defined? Ah.
One does not simply refer to components in React. In our src/App.js
, we're saying "Display what's returned from the Movie
component." However - we haven't told src/Apps.js
where to find the Movie
component!
Add an import statement at the top of the src/App.js
file.
Now you should see the page without the error message, and it should have the JSX from the Movie component.
We need to make the Movie component accept information so we can use it to
display different titles and runtimes. In the src/App.js
file, add title
, hours
, and minutes
props to the <Movie>
tag.
We'll be able to read the value of these props from inside the component. You can name props pretty much anything you want - but it's good practice to be descriptive!
Update the JSX in src/Movie.js
to access and display the value of each prop we created.
Refresh the page and make sure everything works correctly.
Once you've got props working for one component, then write two more!
In src/App.js
, call the <Movie />
component again with different values for the title
, hours
and minutes
properties. Display information for the complete trilogy! (If you don't know everything about Lord of the Rings off the top of your head, here it is).
title | hours | minutes |
---|---|---|
The Fellowship of the Ring | 2 | 58 |
The Two Towers | 2 | 59 |
The Return of the King | 3 | 21 |
When you're finished, review the reflections below.
Components are great because they allow us to compartmentalize code and easily reuse parts we create. We simply set the value of props and the component defines how everything should be displayed.
In this instance, we factored out some redundancy of the movie titles.
- All these movies start with
"Lord of the Rings:"
, so only the unique part is the prop. - Similarly, we don't have to rewrite the format of the runtime information.
Building and reusing components becomes especially powerful the more complex components become.
- Imagine building a component for video search results inside YouTube.
- The props list is huge:
- ton of links
- time information
- preview images
- options to add the result to a playlist
- and all sorts of other things.
- The props list is huge:
Building one component to rule all them all would save you a lot of time and headaches!
In case you want to nerd out, here are handy links to the IMDB page for each movie:
- Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
- Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
- Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
edited from global code-along