47

I just started on react router.

I have two questions. What is the difference between using <Link to="/page"> and <a href="page">? Both make the exact same get request to /page but I get an error when I use <a href="page"> but it works when I use <Link to="/page"> when I am nesting routes. I don't understand, how there could be any difference, when I know for fact that both render to exact same url?

Second is the weird arrow function in react router v4 documentation

const About = () => (
  <div>
    <h2>About</h2>
  </div>
)

I know () => {} these are new in ES6 but I cannot find anything on normal brackets instead of parentheses. What are they?

Edit

My index.js class (I have all the imports)

render((
    <Router>
        <div>
            <Route component={App}/>
        </div>
    </Router>
), document.getElementById('root')
);

My App.js class

class App extends Component {
render() {
    return (
        <div className="container">
            <header>
                <span className="icn-logo"><i className="material-icons">code</i></span>
                <ul className="main-nav">
                    <li><Link to="/">Home</Link></li>
                    <li><Link to="/about">About</Link></li>
                    <li><Link to="/teachers">Teachers</Link></li>
                    <li><Link to="/courses">Courses</Link></li>
                </ul>
            </header>
            <Route exact path="/" component={Home}/>
            <Route path="/about" component={About}/>
            <Route path="/teachers" component={Teachers}/>
            <Route path="/courses" component={Course}/>
        </div>
    );
}
}

export default App;

The error I'm getting. Cannot GET /about on the browser when I try to move to localhost:8080/about. However, when I click the about button, it goes to exactly the same url /about and renders perfectly

2
  • 2
    I'm confused, because () are parentheses ... so you know about braces {}, do you know when a return is implied in an arrow function and when it would be required if you need to return a value? do you also know when you would use () => ({}); in an arrow function? oh, and basically, that function simply returns <div> <h2>About</h2> </div> Mar 29, 2017 at 7:34
  • @JaromandaX sorry I got the vocabs mixed up. But yes that was what I was looking for. Thanks
    – forJ
    Mar 29, 2017 at 7:48

4 Answers 4

83

This may be a bit late to address your issue and you may well have figured it out. But here's my take:

First:

What is the difference between using <Link to="/page"> and <a href="page">

  • On the surface, you seem to be comparing apples and oranges here. The path in your anchor tag is a relative path while that one in the Link is absolute (rightly so, I don't think react-router supports relative paths yet). The problem this creates is say you are on /blah, while clicking on your Link will go to /page, clicking on the <a href='page' /> will take you to /blah/page. This may not be an issue though since you confirmed the correctness of the url, but thought to note.
  • A bit deeper difference, which is just an addon to @Dennis answer (and the docs he pointed to), is when you are already in a route that matches what the Link points to. Say we are currently on /page and the Link points to /page or even /page/:id, this won't trigger a full page refresh while an <a /> tag naturally will. See issue on Github.

A fix I used to solve my little need around this was to pass in a state property into link like so <Link to={{pathname: "/page", state: "desiredState"}}>Page</Link>. Then I can check for this in the target component's (say <Page />) componentWillReceiveProps like so:

componentWillReceiveProps(nextProps){
  if (nextProps.location.state === 'desiredState') {
    // do stuffs
  }
}

Second question:

the weird arrow function in react router v4 documentation... I cannot find anything on normal brackets instead of parentheses. What are they?

Arrow functions; again @Dennis and @Jaromanda X have kind of addressed it. However, I've got three bits to add:

  • When you have () => blah without the curly braces {}, you are implicitly returning whatever follows the => in this case blah. But when you have curly braces immediately after the arrow, then it's now your responsibility to return something if you so desire. So () => blah (which by the way is synonymous to () => (blah)) will be more similar to () => { return blah } and not () => { blah }.
  • So what happens if you want to return an object: { blah: blah }; this is what @Jaromanda X was pointing at. You will then need to do () => ({ blah: blah }) or simply () => ({ blah }) for implicit return or you could return explicitly like so () => { return { blah: blah } }.
  • My third bit is to point you to MDN

Hope it helps.

3
  • In my case, I face the same problem that the react-router does change the URL but not the page contents. After I've tried your solution too it's not working. Any suggestions ?
    – amrs-tech
    Sep 5, 2019 at 7:05
  • @amrs-tech it's tedious to suggest without seeing what you're doing with your routes. A stab in the dark for you to try, however, will be to switch from using react-router render to using component props. That is if you're doing <Route render={() => <YourComponent />} />, try <Route component={YourComponent} /> instead. ¯_(ツ)_/¯ Good luck!
    – flash
    Sep 9, 2019 at 2:25
  • In react hooks, I had an issue with <Link href="">. The page would not load completly, but with <a href=""> it did. Feb 18, 2021 at 15:50
22

The href attribute would trigger a page refresh which would reset the application states. However the link and navlink of react-router doesn't trigger a page refresh. Since React is used to create single page applications most of the time make sure you choose Link or Navlink when working with routing

3

The component allows you to do more than the normal link element. For instance, because it's a React component you have the benefits of having a state and what not (if you want that). You can see more documentation on here. Without the error I'm not sure what happens, but I suspect the routing library wants you to use the component, over a normal html element.

With regards to () => {} this is a construct which is called an anonymous function, or a lambda expression. It's basically the same as saving a function in a variable: var x = function(){ return (<div>...) }; if you have anything in the first parenthesis, it's a parameter which you have access to: const x = (y) => return y*2; The reason it's done in React is to expose the function scope to the component it lies in.

3
  • Hi I have edited to show the error and my classes. Do you think you know what the problem is?
    – forJ
    Mar 29, 2017 at 7:47
  • @serendipity As long as you don't use any other funky business I am not entirely sure. <Link to="/something">Link</Link> changes the URI to /something, then your <Route path="/something" component={Something} /> should pick up on that and render whatever <Something /> is. You say it works with <a>, does that mean the correct component is rendered? You can try and compare your code to this one, which works. fiddle.jshell.net/terda12/mana88Lm
    – Dennis
    Mar 29, 2017 at 8:01
  • as far as I know, routehandler is deprecated in React Route v4 and in v4, it seems like we have to put the route directly in the child class themselves. I am referring to this page reacttraining.com/react-router/web/example/basic
    – forJ
    Mar 29, 2017 at 14:35
3

There is no better then looking at the code source.

https://github.com/ReactTraining/react-router/blob/master/packages/react-router-dom/modules/Link.js

You can see that Link is a component, that internally use history. Which is the module|library behind the history and navigation for react-router. And come with different modes (in memory history, browserHistory, hashHistory. And even custom).

Yea as a similarity it render an anchor tag but the default behavior is overridden (preventDefault()). They could have used just a div. But not completely right. As for the reason bellow.

So basically it work like that:

Observe the condition bellow

  if (
          !event.defaultPrevented && // onClick prevented default
          event.button === 0 && // ignore everything but left clicks
          (!this.props.target || this.props.target === "_self") && // let browser handle "target=_blank" etc.
          !isModifiedEvent(event) // ignore clicks with modifier keys
    ) {

}

if the condition above is met. It will use history (push or replace). Otherwise it will leave the browser normal behavior. And so in that case it will be just a normal anchor tag <a />. Example letting the browser handle target='blank'. The condition are well explained. Then depending on the type of history object. The behavior change. Not the behavior of ` itself. But just the result of the history object type.

In resume:

<Link /> is a component, that render a <a /> anchor tag. However in the main conditions the default behavior is prevented (preventDefault()). That allow it to apply the change to the history object (onClick event). Which react-router navigation is based on. And on the some conditions as mentioned above. It just fall back to the browser behavior. And just be exactly a <a /> anchor tag (no preventDefault()).

For the use. If you are using React-router. Then you just need to use Link.

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