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React and React Native

React and React Native

By : Mikhail Sakhniuk, Roy Derks, Adam Boduch
4.3 (10)
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React and React Native

React and React Native

4.3 (10)
By: Mikhail Sakhniuk, Roy Derks, Adam Boduch

Overview of this book

Welcome to your big-picture guide to the React ecosystem. If you’re new to React and looking to become a professional React developer, this book is for you. This updated fifth edition reflects the current state of React, including React framework coverage as well as TypeScript. Part 1 introduces you to React. You’ll discover JSX syntax, hooks, functional components, and event handling, learn techniques to fetch data from a server, and tackle the tricky problem of state management. Once you’re comfortable with writing React in JavaScript, you’ll pick up TypeScript development in later chapters. Part 2 transitions you into React Native for mobile development. React Native goes hand-in-hand with React. With your React knowledge behind you, you’ll appreciate where and how React Native differs as you write shared components for Android and iOS apps. You’ll learn how to build responsive layouts, use animations, and implement geolocation. By the end of this book, you’ll have a big-picture view of React and React Native and be able to build applications with both.
Table of Contents (33 chapters)
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1
Part I: React
16
Part II: React Native
31
Other Books You May Enjoy
32
Index

Summary

This chapter introduced you to event handling in React. The key differentiator between React and other approaches to event handling is that handlers are declared in JSX markup. This makes tracking down which elements handle which events much simpler.

You learned that having multiple event handlers on a single element is a matter of adding new JSX properties. Then, you learned about inline event handler functions and their potential use, as well as how React actually binds a single DOM event handler to the document object.

Synthetic events are abstractions that wrap native events; you learned why they’re necessary and how they’re pooled for efficient memory consumption.

In the next chapter, you’ll learn how to create components that are reusable for a variety of purposes. Instead of writing new components for each use case that you encounter, you’ll learn the skills necessary to refactor existing components so that they can be used in...

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