Posted in react
2911
12:33 am, June 12, 2024
 

React - Use State to Toggle an Element

Mastering React State: Toggling Elements with Confidence

React's state management system is a powerful tool for building dynamic and interactive user interfaces. One common use case involves toggling the visibility or behavior of elements based on user actions. This blog post dives into how to effectively leverage state to achieve element toggling in your React applications.

Toggling elements can introduce a subtle but important concept: handling asynchronous state updates. React might group multiple state updates together for efficiency, making it unreliable to directly access the previous state value within the update function itself.

To address this, we'll explore two approaches to ensure you're always working with the most recent state information:

1. Using a Function with setState

This approach is particularly useful when you need to access both the current state and props to determine the next state. Here's the breakdown:

JavaScript
this.setState((state, props) => ({
  counter: state.counter + props.increment
}));

Inside the function passed to setState, you have access to the current state (state) and props (props). This allows you to perform calculations based on the latest values and return the new state object.

2. Using a Function Without Props

If you only need the current state to determine the next state, you can simplify the function further:

JavaScript
this.setState(state => ({
  counter: state.counter + 1
}));

Here, the function receives just the current state (state) and returns the updated state object.

Key Takeaway

By embracing these techniques, you guarantee that your element toggling logic always operates on the most up-to-date state information, preventing unexpected behavior and ensuring a smooth user experience in your React applications.

Javascript

class MyComponent extends React.Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);
    this.state = {
      visibility: false
    };
    // Change code below this line
    this.toggleVisibility = this.toggleVisibility.bind(this);
    // Change code above this line
  }
  // Change code below this line
  toggleVisibility() {
    this.setState(state => ({
      visibility: !state.visibility
    }));
  }
  // Change code above this line
  render() {
    if (this.state.visibility) {
      return (
        <div>
          <button onClick={this.toggleVisibility}>Click Me</button>
          <h1>Now you see me!</h1>
        </div>
      );
    } else {
      return (
        <div>
          <button onClick={this.toggleVisibility}>Click Me</button>
        </div>
      );
    }
  }
}

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symbols()

The symbols() CSS function lets you define counter styles inline, directly as the value of a property such as list-style. Unlike @counter-style, symbols() is anonymous (i.e., it can only be used once). Although less powerful, it is shorter and easier to write than @counter-style.
symbols() css reference