Let's understand JSX.Element vs React.ReactElement vs React.ReactNode step by step:
JSX.Element
and React.ReactElement
JSX.Element
and React.ReactElement
are functionally the same type. They can be used interchangeably.
Consider below example:
const element = <div className="greeting">Hello, world!</div>;
When the above JSX code runs, it doesn't directly create something you can see on the screen. Instead, it creates a JavaScript object that describes that piece of UI. This object is like a blueprint or a recipe. This is how this blueprint or recipe object will look like:
const element = {
type: 'div',
props: {
className: 'greeting',
children: 'Hello, world!'
}
};
- type: This tells React what type of element we want to create. In this case, it's a
div
.
- props: This is an object that holds all the properties (or "props") that we've passed to our element. Here, we've passed a
className
prop with the value 'greeting'
.
- children: This is a special prop that represents the content inside our element. In this case, it's the string
'Hello, world!'
.
This object is what React uses to understand how to build and update the actual UI on the screen. When React sees this object, it knows to create a div element, give it a class of 'greeting', and put the text 'Hello, world!' inside it.
In a nutshell, we say A ReactElement is an object with a type and props.
So what is the difference between JSX.Element
and React.ReactElement
?
JSX.Element
is a TypeScript type for JSX expressions, and React.ReactElement
is a React type for React elements.
Is this correct?
const Component = ({
children,
}: {
children: JSX.Element;
}) => {
return <div>{children}</div>;
};
// Usage
<Component>hello world</Component>
In above stated example, TypeScript isn't happy because we declared the type of children
to be JSX.Element
, however, we are passing a string ("hello world") which is not a JSX.Element
. Hence, we need a different type for children
that can accept string, number, null, ReactElement ....
This is where React.ReactNode
shines.
React.ReactNode
As per below definition of React.ReactNode
.
React.ReactNode
is a ReactElement, string, number, ReactFragment, ReactPortal, boolean, null & undefined.
declare namespace React {
type ReactNode =
| ReactElement
| string
| number
| ReactFragment
| ReactPortal
| boolean
| null
| undefined;
}
Example:
const Component = ({
children,
}: {
children: React.ReactNode
}) => {
return <div>{children}</div>;
};
// Usage
<Component> Hello World </Component>
Now TypeScript is happy!!
Happy coding!
class Example extends Component<ExampleProps> {
for classes, andconst Example: FunctionComponent<ExampleProps> = (props) => {
for function components (whereExampleProps
is an interface for the expected props). And then these types have enough information that the return type can be inferred.