The problem is that you are passing to the onClick
event a function invocation, and not a function reference.
im not doing any looping whats going on with this error then?
In the first initial render
call when you pass the handler function, you actually invoke it. This function is updating the state which triggers another render
call which you pass again a function invocation that will do another update to the state which will trigger another render
call and so on.
Hence an infinite loop.
why the console.log()
call from the wrong method? is this a bug?
As i mentioned above, you are passing a function invocation, hence on each render you call console.log(value)
instead of listening to the onClick
event, and when you change the input (which works as expected) you rerender again and call console.log(value)
once more. So it's not the handleChange
that calling the console.log
, it is render
function that is calling handleClick
which invoke console.log
.
No bugs or magics here, it may not be the desired behavior but it is the expected behavior according to your code and logic.
You got 2 main options here.
Easy and fast fix: Pass a function reference that returns a function with your logic there. I'm using currying, so with ES6
arrow functions is just as easy as adding another parameter and an
arrow:
handleClick = (value) => (e) => {
console.log(value);
this.setState({ myValue: value });
};
This approach does have it's advantages, like fast implementation
and easy to understand and read the code but it may cause
performance issues.
You see, you are returning a new instance of a
function on each render and react will treat it as a new prop
this
can interrupt the diffing algorithm of react.
A working example:
class App extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
myValue: "Hello World"
};
this.handleClick = this.handleClick.bind(this);
this.handleChange = this.handleChange.bind(this);
}
handleClick = (value) => (e) => {
console.log(value);
this.setState({ myValue: value });
};
handleChange = (e) => {
this.setState({ myValue: e.target.value });
}
render() {
return (
<div>
<div>
<input value={this.state.myValue} onChange={this.handleChange} />
</div>
<button onClick={this.handleClick(this.state.myValue)}>set</button>
<h3>{this.state.myValue}</h3>
</div>
);
}
}
ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById("root"));
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.1.0/react.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.1.0/react-dom.min.js"></script>
<div id="root"></div>
A better approach that is considered as best practice, is to compose a
component that accepts an event and a parameter as separate props
and will send this value upwards when the event is triggered.
For example MyButton.js
:
class MyButton extends React.Component{
handleClick = e =>{
const {onClick, clickValue} = this.props;
this.props.onClick(clickValue);
}
render(){
const {children} = this.props;
return <button onClick={this.handleClick}>{children}</button>
}
}
A working example:
class MyButton extends React.Component{
handleClick = e =>{
const {onClick, clickValue} = this.props;
this.props.onClick(clickValue);
}
render(){
const {children} = this.props;
return <button onClick={this.handleClick}>{children}</button>
}
}
class App extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
myValue: "Hello World"
};
this.handleClick = this.handleClick.bind(this);
this.handleChange = this.handleChange.bind(this);
}
handleClick = (value) => {
console.log(value);
this.setState({ myValue: value });
};
handleChange = (e) => {
this.setState({ myValue: e.target.value });
}
render() {
const {myValue} = this.state;
return (
<div>
<div>
<input value={myValue} onChange={this.handleChange} />
</div>
<MyButton clickValue={myValue} onClick={this.handleClick}>set</MyButton>
<h3>{myValue}</h3>
</div>
);
}
}
ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById("root"));
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.1.0/react.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.1.0/react-dom.min.js"></script>
<div id="root"></div>
By the way, you don't need to bind
the handlers to the class
when you're using arrow functions. it binds the this
automatically.
The body of ES6 arrow functions share the same lexical this as the
code that surrounds them, which gets us the desired result because of
the way that ES7 property initializers are scoped