5

How can I change the state of a React component from my old legacy jQuery soup code?

I have a component like this:

var AComponent = React.createClass({
  getInitialState: function() {
    return { ids: [] }
  },
  render: function() {
    ...
  },
  onButtonClick: function() {
    ids.splice(…); // remove the last id
  }
});

When something special happens in the old jQuery soup code, I'd like to push an id to AComponent.state.ids. How can I do that?

One "obvious" solution is an anti-pattern; here it is:

var componentInstance = AComtonent({});
React.renderComponent(componentInstance, document.getElementById(...));

// Somewhere else, in the jQuery soup. Something special happens:
componentIntance.state.ids.push(1234);
componentIntance.setState(componentInstance.state);

This is an antipattern, according to this email from a Facebook developer, because he writes that componentInstance might be destroyed by React.

2
  • I think by design a state mutation is supposed to be internal, so if you want to change it from outside, you should use a props. Which means splitting your component in two in your case. IE: moving your state to something encompassing your jquery soup trigger and thus solving your problem.
    – plus-
    Sep 25, 2014 at 9:59
  • @plus Good to know that state mutation should be internal only. I didn't understand what you mean with "encompassing your jquery soup trigger" — did you mean that the state should be placed outside the component and I'd pass state mutators as props to the component? (As in kulesa's answer.)
    – KajMagnus
    Sep 26, 2014 at 3:19

1 Answer 1

5

I would make the component stateless. Store the ids array outside of your component and pass it as a prop with functions that will modify the array. See example on JSFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/ohvco4o2/5/

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