93

I'm building an app using the Google Books API and I appear to be passing a unique key to each child in the list, but the error won't go away. I must be doing something wrong but I'm not sure what.

const BookList = (props) => {
    //map over all of the book items to create a new card for each one in the list
    const books = props.books.data.items.map((book) => {
        console.log(book.id);
        return (
            <div className="col col-lg-4 grid-wrapper">
                <BookCard
                    key={book.id}
                    image={book.volumeInfo.imageLinks.thumbnail}
                    title={book.volumeInfo.title}
                    author={book.volumeInfo.authors[0]}
                    description={book.volumeInfo.description}
                    previewLink={book.volumeInfo.previewLink}
                    buyLink={book.saleInfo.buyLink}
                />
            </div>
        );
    });

    return <div>{books}</div>;
};

Notice that after the return in const books I have a console.log(book.id), which will display all 10 unique id keys in the console. But when I try to pass it to the child of this component using key={book.id}, I get this error.

3 Answers 3

150

The key needs to go on the outermost returned element. In your specific case, that means changing this:

            <div className="col col-lg-4 grid-wrapper">
                <BookCard 
                    key={book.id}

to this:

            <div className="col col-lg-4 grid-wrapper" key={book.id}>
                <BookCard 
8
  • 4
    That did it! Is there a specific reason why the key has to be on the outermost returned element?
    – Matt Brody
    Mar 14, 2019 at 2:28
  • 18
    When React goes through an array, it only looks at the things directly in it. It doesn't recurse all the way through looking for a key. If it did, it would (1) be slow, and (2) cause ambiguity when there were nested arrays. Mar 14, 2019 at 2:29
  • 4
    In case this got anyone else: If you define a custom component, and that's what's inside your list, the key has to go on the props of the component itself, NOT the DOM element that the component returns. May 19, 2022 at 12:54
  • 1
    That works for me as well, I had a parent element below the .map and it continued to complain about that, I was focusing on the nested list for several hours, now I have both of them loading without the error May 29, 2022 at 20:46
  • 1
18

I was using React fragments in my map() call in their simple syntax form, and was running into the same warnings with the code below:

<>
  <h3>{employee.department}</h3>
  <TableRow
    key={employee.id}
    cellValues={["Name", "Title"]} />

  <TableRow
    key={employee.id}
    cellValues={[employee.name, employee.title]}
  />
</>

Building off the accepted answer, I realized I needed the outermost element to have the ID. I learned of an alternate syntax for React fragments that allows one to put an ID on it. The resulting code below caused the warnings to go away:

<React.Fragment key={employee.id}>
  <h3>{employee.department}</h3>
  <TableRow
    cellValues={["Name", "Title"]} />

  <TableRow
    cellValues={[employee.name, employee.title]}
  />
</React.Fragment>
0

div is parent element and p is child elements and child element having key props

<div> 
{["Tom", "Harry", "ken"].map(item =>
 <p key="{item}">{item}</p> 
)}
</div>

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