1

I'm still learning ReactJS. I'm challenging myself to write a very basic todo app (as one does) and I'm having an issue calling an onClick function.

var List = React.createClass({

  handleClick: function () {
    alert("Clicked!");
  },

  render: function () {

    var list = this.props.items;
    var items = list.map(function(item){
      return (
        <li style={{borderBottom:'1px solid red'}}>
          <label onClick={this.handleClick}>
            <input type="checkbox" />
            {item}
          </label>
        </li>
      );
    });

    return (
      <ul>{items}</ul>
    )
  }
});

The issue here is that onClick={this.handleClick} cannot be called because it is not inside the return call in the render function.

What do I need to do to access handleClick from inside the map function?

1

3 Answers 3

2

The second argument for the map function is a value to define the scope of this when executing the callback.:

.map( callback( currentValue, index, array), value_for_this/scope_to_run_in )

So you can modify your map function as follows:

var items = list.map(function(item){
  return (
    <li style={{borderBottom:'1px solid red'}}>
      <label onClick={this.handleClick}>
        <input type="checkbox" />
        {item}
      </label>
    </li>
  );
}, this);

You could also use an arrow function which where this is implicitly bound:

var items = list.map((item) => {
  return (
    <li style={{borderBottom:'1px solid red'}}>
      <label onClick={this.handleClick}>
        <input type="checkbox" />
        {item}
      </label>
    </li>
  );
});
2
  • That resolves the issue, but now the click is firing on page load as well (so getting 3 alerts in a row, one per list item, on page load) Nov 16, 2016 at 21:23
  • That is strange. You're not invoking the handleClick when setting it on the onClick by defining it with parenthesis ( onClick = {this.handleclick()} ) , are you?
    – Pineda
    Nov 16, 2016 at 21:29
1

The problem you're running into is that your call to list.map will invoke the passed function with a different this than you have in your render method.

An easy fix is to grab this in the outer scope and stash it in a variable, then use that variable in your inline function.

render: function () {
    var self = this;
 // ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

    var list = this.props.items;
    var items = list.map(function(item){
      return (
        <li style={{borderBottom:'1px solid red'}}>
          <label onClick={self.handleClick}>
                       // ^^^^
            <input type="checkbox" />
            {item}
          </label>
        </li>
      );
    });

    return (
      <ul>{items}</ul>
    )
}
2
  • that's a nice trick. it feels a little too easy - are there any downsides to this? Nov 17, 2016 at 19:04
  • @MattSaunders this is a pretty common pattern in pre-ES2015 code. It essentially does the same thing as what an ES2015 arrow function would do, you're just doing it by hand. There are other options (rebinding, passing this to map, etc) but this way is similarly performant and at least as readable.
    – Adam Maras
    Nov 17, 2016 at 19:57
0

You should bind this explicitly to the handleClick function to be referring to the React component not the map function, so you can refactor your code as follow:

var items = list.map(renderListItem.bind(this));

And add renderListItem method in your React class as follow:

renderListItem(item) {
  return (
    <li style={{borderBottom:'1px solid red'}}>
      <label onClick={this.handleClick}>
        <input type="checkbox" />
        {item}
      </label>
    </li>
  );
}

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