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React Key Concepts

React Key Concepts

By : Maximilian Schwarzmüller
4.8 (4)
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React Key Concepts

React Key Concepts

4.8 (4)
By: Maximilian Schwarzmüller

Overview of this book

Maximilian Schwarzmüller is a bestselling instructor who has helped more than three million students worldwide learn how to code. His bestselling React video course, “React – The Complete Guide”, has over eight hundred thousand students on Udemy. Max has written this quick-start reference that distills the core concepts of React. Simple explanations, relevant examples, and step-by-step derivations make this guide the ideal resource for busy developers. In this second edition, Max guides you through changes brought by React 19, including the new use() hook, form actions, and how to think about React on the server. This book will support you through your next React projects in giving you a behind-the-scenes understanding of the framework – whether you've just finished Max's video course and are looking for a handy reference, or you’re using a variety of other learning materials and need a single study guide to bring everything together. You’ll find full solutions to all end-of-chapter quizzes and exercises in the book’s GitHub repository.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
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React Key Concepts, Second Edition: An in-depth guide to React’s core features

Introduction

Having worked through the first twelve chapters of this book, you should now know how to build React components and web apps, as well as how to manage components and app-wide state, and how to share data between components (via props or context).

But even though you know how to compose a React website from multiple components, all these components are on the same single website page. Sure, you can display components and content conditionally, but users will never switch to a different page. This means that the URL path will never change; users will always stay on your-domain.com. Also, at this point in time, your React apps don't support any paths such as your-domain.com/products or your-domain.com/blog/latest.

Uniform Resource Locators (URLs) are references to web resources. For example, https://academind.com/courses is a URL that points to a specific page of the author's website. In this example, academind.com is the domain name of the website and /courses is...

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