📓 Passing Data Via Callbacks
In the last lesson, we covered the tricky concept of unidirectional data flow. In this lesson, we'll apply what we've learned. To recap, we'll need to do the following:
- Move
mainTicketList
into state. - Create a method in our parent
TicketControl
component. This method will take any form data and turn it into an actual ticket. - Pass this method down to the child
NewTicketForm
component as a prop — and also add PropTypes. - Add our new method to the existing function in our child component so that it's triggered when a user submits the form.
In order to do this, we only need to add a few lines of code — and make small modifications to a few other lines. Despite the relatively small amount of code being added, we are still working with challenging new concepts. Be patient with yourself and follow along slowly. If it doesn't all click immediately (and it probably won't), trust the process and keep practicing these concepts in class and on your own.
Step 1: Move mainTicketList into State​
Let's start by adding a mainTicketList property to state and passing it down as a prop to TicketList
:
class TicketControl extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
formVisibleOnPage: false,
mainTicketList: [] // new code
};
}
...
if (this.state.formVisibleOnPage) {
currentlyVisibleState = <NewTicketForm />;
buttonText = "Return to Ticket List";
} else {
currentlyVisibleState = <TicketList ticketList={this.state.mainTicketList} />; // new code
buttonText = "Add Ticket";
}
...
Notice we're initializing mainTicketList as an empty array. We're doing this because we don't want this application to start with fake tickets. The queue should be empty until we start adding tickets via our form. (We'll be removing our array of dummy tickets from TicketList
in just a moment.) Also, notice how we're passing mainTicketList down to TicketList
. We include it as a prop and target its place in state with this.state.mainTicketList
. Here we're calling it ticketList
, so that's the name we'll use to access it as a prop in TicketList
.
Step #2: Pass New Props to TicketList Component and Add propTypes​
In the first step, we passed mainTicketList
state from TicketControl.js
down to our TicketList
component. Now we need to actually add props and prop types to TicketList.js
. We'll also remove the mainTicketList
constant that holds our dummy tickets as well.
import React from "react";
import Ticket from "./Ticket";
import PropTypes from "prop-types";
// remove const mainTicketList = [ ... ]. We no longer want these.
function TicketList(props) { // Add props as parameter.
return (
<React.Fragment>
<hr />
{props.ticketList.map((ticket, index) => // Loop through the list passed down from TicketControl.
<Ticket names={ticket.names}
location={ticket.location}
issue={ticket.issue}
key={index} />
)}
</React.Fragment>
);
}
// Add propTypes for ticketList.
TicketList.propTypes = {
ticketList: PropTypes.array
};
export default TicketList;
We've made several changes here. Now that we are passing ticketList
down through props
, we need to import prop-types
and add a prop type of array for our ticketList
. We also remove our mainTicketList
constant which stored three fake tickets — we won't need these anymore!
Now we'll be able to make changes to our ticket list and, ultimately, display tickets as they're added.
Step 3: Create a Method to Handle Our Form Submission​
We'll start with step #1: creating a method in our TicketControl
component.
...
class TicketControl extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
...
}
...
handleAddingNewTicketToList = (newTicket) => {
const newMainTicketList = this.state.mainTicketList.concat(newTicket);
this.setState({mainTicketList: newMainTicketList,
formVisibleOnPage: false });
}
...
Our new method is called handleAddingNewTicketToList
because it does just that — handle the process of adding a new ticket in our mainTicketList
. It takes a newTicket
as a parameter.
It's common practice to prefix the name of an event handler function with handle
. Any props containing that function will be prefixed with on
. (We will add our prop in the next step.) This is because the prop will be used when the event occurs, but the function itself is what actually handles the necessary actions. It also ensures the names are similar enough to easily determine which props and functions correspond, yet different enough to determine when we're referencing a function and when we're referencing a prop containing a function.
Next, we create a constant called newMainTicketList
. Remember that we should never alter state directly. Instead, we will let React do that with the setState()
method.
We take this.state.mainTicketList
and call concat()
on it. Unlike push()
, which directly alters the array its called on, concat()
makes a copy of that array. Anything passed into concat()
(in this case, our newTicket
) will be concatenated to the end of the new array.
Next, we set the value of mainTicketList
to the newMainTicketList
variable we just created. As noted, we are using setState()
to make our direct change to state.
Finally, once the ticket has successfully been submitted, we want to set formVisibleOnPage
to false again so that the user will see the queue, not the form.
Step 4: Pass Method Down to Child Component as a Prop​
Now we need to pass our new handleAddingNewTicketToList
method down to our NewTicketForm
component as a prop. We'll start by making a small update to our TicketControl
's render()
method:
...
render(){
...
if (this.state.formVisibleOnPage) {
currentlyVisibleState = <NewTicketForm onNewTicketCreation={this.handleAddingNewTicketToList} /> { // new code in this line }
buttonText = "Return to Ticket List";
} else {
....
We will pass this.handleAddingNewTicketToList
as a prop to the NewTicketForm
. It will be saved in the prop onNewTicketCreation
. As noted in Step 1, we prefix the prop with on
. This differentiates the method in our parent component (which will actually handle the event) from the function in our child component (which is triggered when the event happens).
Next, we need to make a few changes to our child NewTicketForm
so that it will accept props.
import React from "react";
import PropTypes from "prop-types"; //import PropTypes
function NewTicketForm(props){ // Make sure to add props as a parameter.
...
}
// We also need to add PropTypes for our new prop.
NewTicketForm.propTypes = {
onNewTicketCreation: PropTypes.func
};
export default NewTicketForm;
We do two things here:
- Ensure we are passing
props
into our function component. Otherwise, ourNewTicketForm
won't have access to props fromTicketControl
. - We add a
PropTypes
foronNewTicketCreation
. Remember thatthis.handleAddingNewTicketToList
is passed down to the child component asonNewTicketCreation
.
Step 5: Add a Unique ID and Utilize the Parent Component's Method in the Child Component​
We're almost done! We need to two things:
- Import the UUID library to assign unique IDs to new tickets.
- Update the
handleNewTicketFormSubmission
function so that it creates a new ticket object and uses ouronNewTicketCreation
prop to send the ticket object to the parent component,TicketControl
.
Here's the updated code:
...
import { v4 } from 'uuid'; // new code
function NewTicketForm(props){
...
function handleNewTicketFormSubmission(event) {
event.preventDefault();
props.onNewTicketCreation({
names: event.target.names.value,
location: event.target.location.value,
issue: event.target.issue.value,
id: v4()
});
}
...
Because a function component doesn't have this
as a reference like a class component, we need to directly refer to the props
passed into the function component. That's why we do props.onNewTicketCreation()
instead of this.onNewTicketCreation()
(as we'd do if this were a class component).
We create an object with all of the ticket properties and pass it as the argument to props.onNewTicketCreation()
. We also create a unique ID with the UUID library.
Take note that if we need to get a number from our form, we'd want to parse any form values at this point. For example, say we wanted to track the number of students who need help; in this case, we might have a property called numberOfStudents
and we'd want to make sure we parse the corresponding form value:
props.onNewTicketCreation({
...
numberOfStudents: parseInt(event.target.numberOfStudents.value)
});
Remember that onNewTicketCreation()
is the callback from the parent component even though it has a different name now. The following method is invoked in TicketControl
:
handleAddingNewTicketToList = (newTicket) => {
const newMainTicketList = this.state.mainTicketList.concat(newTicket);
this.setState({
mainTicketList: newMainTicketList,
formVisibleOnPage: false
});
}
When we call props.onNewTicketCreation({names: names.value, location: location.value, issue: issue.value});
in the NewTicketForm
component, this object is passed in as an argument to the newTicket
parameter, updating the mainTicketList
.
Try it out in the browser. Now when we add a ticket via the form, it will be added to the queue!