3

I can't find out why i can't get the data, while I can access it through console.log() !

export class InnerTicket extends React.Component{
constructor(props){
    super(props);
    this.state = {
        ticket: ''
    }
}

componentDidMount() {
    this.getTicket().then(result => this.setState({
        ticket: result
    }))
}

getTicket(){
    const slug = this.props.match.params.id;
    return this.props.TicketsStore.loadTicket(slug);
}
render(){
    console.log(this.state);

everything works fine when I run this and i can see the data through the console:

{ticket: {…}}ticket: {success: true, data: {…}, error: "", message: ""}data: {result: "success", ticketid: 22, tid: "168552", c: "WHgCsCBO", deptid: 5, …}error: ""message: ""success: true__proto__: Object__proto__: Object

but when I want to display my data in the view like this:

render(){
    return( <span className="label label-warning">
                            {this.state.ticket.data.status}
                        </span>)

I get this error: TypeError: Cannot read property 'status' of undefined

3
  • what about render(){ return( <span className="label label-warning"> {this.state.ticket.data ? this.state.ticket.data.status : null} </span>)
    – ingvar
    Nov 4, 2018 at 10:29
  • @ingvar the same error occurs...
    – Ali Jawadi
    Nov 4, 2018 at 10:31
  • oops. {this.state.ticket ? this.state.ticket.data.status : null} should work
    – ingvar
    Nov 4, 2018 at 10:33

2 Answers 2

3

You're initialized your state to this:

this.state = {
    ticket: ''
}

So on the first render, this.state.ticket is an empty string, and this.state.ticket.data is undefined. Only later are you updating state.ticket to an object.

To fix this, either make the initial state be something that works with your render method, or make your render method check for the possibility of an empty string.

2
  • how do I make my render method check for the possibility of an empty string?
    – Ali Jawadi
    Nov 4, 2018 at 10:22
  • For example, if you want to render nothing: if (this.state.ticket === '') { return null } Nov 4, 2018 at 10:23
1

I'm not sure if it's perfect, but should work fine:

render(){
    return( <span className="label label-warning">
                            {this.state.ticket.data.status ? this.state.ticket.data.status : null}
                        </span>)
2
  • no, the result is the same: Cannot read property 'status' of undefined
    – Ali Jawadi
    Nov 4, 2018 at 10:23
  • What about {this.state.ticket ? this.state.ticket.data.status : null}
    – Bruinen
    Nov 4, 2018 at 10:29

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