1

Like below simple react component code:

class Test extends React.Component {
    constructor(props){
        super(props)
        this.c1 = this.c1.bind(this);
        this.c2 = this.c2.bind(this);
        this.state = {
            a:false,
            b:false
        }
    }

    c1(e) {
        this.setState({a:true, b:false})
    }

    c2(e) {
        this.setState({a:false, b:true})
    }


    render() {
        return (
            <div>
                <div>
                    <input name="n" type="radio"  onChange={this.c1} />
                    <input name="n" type="radio"  onChange={this.c2} />
                </div>
                <div>
                    {
                        this.state.a && "aa"
                    }
                    {
                        this.state.b && "bb"
                    }
                </div>
            </div>
        )
    }
}

The code simply switch displaying 'aa' or 'bb' while click the radio button. But if I add a new radio button showing 'cc' to achieve the same function. I should:

  1. Add new state like 'c'
  2. Add new input HTML and implement its callback
  3. setState 'c' in this callback

All of those is ok, But I have to change the 'c1','c2' function that make my code coupling like:

class Test extends React.Component {
    constructor(props){
        super(props)
        this.c1 = this.c1.bind(this);
        this.c2 = this.c2.bind(this);
        this.c3 = this.c3.bind(this);
        this.state = {
            a:false,
            b:false,
            c:false,
        }
    }

    c1(e) {
        this.setState({a:true, b:false, c:false}) // add 'c:false' which coupled
    }

    c2(e) {
        this.setState({a:false, b:true, c:false}) // add 'c:false' which coupled
    }

    c3(e) {
        this.setState({a:false, b:false, c:true})
    }


    render() {
        return (
            <div>
                <div>
                    <input name="n" type="radio"  onChange={this.c1} />
                    <input name="n" type="radio"  onChange={this.c2} />
                    <input name="n" type="radio"  onChange={this.c3} />
                </div>
                <div>
                    {
                        this.state.a && "aa"
                    }
                    {
                        this.state.b && "bb"
                    }
                    {
                        this.state.c && "cc"
                    }
                </div>
            </div>
        )
    }
}

I think this situation is very common in React. So I want decoupling my code no matter how many radio buttons I add. I do not need to change the code just add code to satisfy the 'Open Closed Principle'.

Do you have any recommendation? Thanks in advance.

2
  • Looks like Stackoverflow question might be what you're looking for (?)
    – Dor Weid
    Jan 24, 2021 at 13:02
  • thanks @DorWeid this is about design pattern not about how to use radio button.
    – Courage
    Jan 24, 2021 at 13:05

2 Answers 2

2

I think you can do like this

class Test extends React.Component {
    constructor(props){
        super(props)
        this.change = this.change.bind(this);
        this.state = {
            a:false,
            b:false,
            c:false,
        }
    }

   change = statename => e => {
    this.setdefault();
    this.setState({
        [statename]: true
      });
  };
  setdefault(){
    this.setState({
      a:false,
      b:false,
      c:false,
    });
  }


    render() {
        return (
            <div>
                <div>
                    <input name="n" type="radio"  onChange={this.change("a")} />
                    <input name="n" type="radio"  onChange={this.change("b")} />
                    <input name="n" type="radio"  onChange={this.change("c")} />
                </div>
                <div>
                    {
                        this.state.a && "aa"
                    }
                    {
                        this.state.b && "bb"
                    }
                    {
                        this.state.c && "cc"
                    }
                </div>
            </div>
        )
    }
}
0
1

The way that you are storing the state as keyed boolean values doesn't feel right to me given that the properties are codependent rather than independent.

Right now, you have four options for state:

{ a:false, b:false, c:false } // initial state from constructor
{ a:true, b:false, c:false } // from c1
{ a:false, b:true, c:false } // from c2
{ a:false, b:false, c:true } // from c3

Based on your setState callbacks, no more than 1 property can be true at a time.

If each property was independent, you would have 8 options (2^3) and this setup would make sense.

As it is, I recommend that you instead just store which of the values is the one that is true. You can check if an individual option is true by seeing if it matches the stored selected value.

You want your Component to work no matter how many buttons you have, so let's pass the button options as props. In terms of design patterns, this is "dependency injection". We can create a SelectOne that doesn't need to know what its options are. Here I am just expecting the options to be a string like "aa" or "bb" but you can refactor this to take an object with properties label and value.

We want to loop through the array of options and render each one. Sometimes you see this extracted into a method of the component, like this.renderOption(i), but you can also do the mapping inline inside your render().

You aren't actually using the event e in your callbacks. You could use the event to get e.target.value, assuming that you are setting the value property on your input (see MDN docs regarding the HTML markup). You could also pass the value to the callback by creating an anonymous arrow function for onChange which calls it with the correct value. I'm doing that.

Here it as a class component, since that's what you were using previously.

class SelectOne extends React.Component {

  constructor(props) {
    super(props);
    this.state = {
      selected: undefined // this.state.selected will initially be undefined
    }
  }

  render() {
    return (
      <div>
        <div>
          {this.props.options.map((optionName) => (
            <label htmlFor={optionName}>
              {optionName}
              <input
                type="radio"
                id={optionName}
                name="n"
                value={optionName}
                checked={this.state.selected === optionName}
                onChange={() => this.setState({selected: optionName})}
              />
            </label>
          ))}
        </div>
        {this.state.selected !== undefined && (
          <h2>Selected: {this.state.selected}</h2>
        )}
      </div>
    );
  }
}

Here it is as a function Component. This is the newer syntax, so if you are just learning then I recommend learning with function components and hooks. Destructring the props makes it really easy to accept optional props and set their default value. I'm allowing the name property of the input to be passed in here, but defaulting to your "n" if not provided.

const SelectOne = ({options, name = "n"}) => {
  // will be either a string or undefined
  const [selected, setSelected] = React.useState(undefined);

  return (
    <div>
      <div>
        {options.map((optionName) => (
          <label htmlFor={optionName}>
            {optionName}
            <input
              type="radio"
              id={optionName}
              name={name} // from props
              value={optionName}
              checked={selected === optionName}
              onChange={() => setSelected(optionName)}
            />
          </label>
        ))}
      </div>
      {selected !== undefined && (
          <h2>Selected: {selected}</h2>
      )}
    </div>
  );
}

Either way, you would call it like this:

<SelectOne options={["aa", "bb", "cc"]} />

You could also create a specific components for a given set of options, which you can now call with no props.

const SelectABC = () => <SelectOne options={["aa", "bb", "cc"]} />;
<SelectABC/>

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