A mostly reasonable approach to React and JSX
- Only include one React component per file.
- Always use JSX syntax.
- Do not use
React.createElement
unless you're initializing the app from a file that is not JSX.
- Use class extends React.Component unless you have a very good reason to use mixins.
// bad
const Listing = React.createClass({
render() {
return <div />;
}
});
// good
class Listing extends React.Component {
render() {
return <div />;
}
}
-
Extensions: Use
.jsx
extension for React components. -
Filename: Use PascalCase for filenames. E.g.,
ReservationCard.jsx
. -
Reference Naming: Use PascalCase for React components and camelCase for their instances:
// bad const reservationCard = require('./ReservationCard'); // good const ReservationCard = require('./ReservationCard'); // bad const ReservationItem = <ReservationCard />; // good const reservationItem = <ReservationCard />;
Component Naming: Use the filename as the component name. For example,
ReservationCard.jsx
should have a reference name ofReservationCard
. However, for root components of a directory, useindex.jsx
as the filename and use the directory name as the component name:// bad const Footer = require('./Footer/Footer.jsx') // bad const Footer = require('./Footer/index.jsx') // good const Footer = require('./Footer')
-
Do not use displayName for naming components. Instead, name the component by reference.
// bad export default React.createClass({ displayName: 'ReservationCard', // stuff goes here }); // good export default class ReservationCard extends React.Component { }
-
Follow these alignment styles for JSX syntax
// bad <Foo superLongParam="bar" anotherSuperLongParam="baz" /> // good <Foo superLongParam="bar" anotherSuperLongParam="baz" /> // if props fit in one line then keep it on the same line <Foo bar="bar" /> // children get indented normally <Foo superLongParam="bar" anotherSuperLongParam="baz" > <Spazz /> </Foo>
- Always use double quotes (
"
) for JSX attributes, but single quotes for all other JS.
Why? JSX attributes can't contain escaped quotes, so double quotes make conjunctions like
"don't"
easier to type. Regular HTML attributes also typically use double quotes instead of single, so JSX attributes mirror this convention.
```javascript
// bad
<Foo bar='bar' />
// good
<Foo bar="bar" />
// bad
<Foo style={{ left: "20px" }} />
// good
<Foo style={{ left: '20px' }} />
```
- Always include a single space in your self-closing tag.
// bad <Foo/> // very bad <Foo /> // bad <Foo /> // good <Foo />
- Always use camelCase for prop names.
// bad <Foo UserName="hello" phone_number={12345678} /> // good <Foo userName="hello" phoneNumber={12345678} />
- Wrap JSX tags in parentheses when they span more than one line:
/// bad render() { return <MyComponent className="long body" foo="bar"> <MyChild /> </MyComponent>; } // good render() { return ( <MyComponent className="long body" foo="bar"> <MyChild /> </MyComponent> ); } // good, when single line render() { const body = <div>hello</div>; return <MyComponent>{body}</MyComponent>; }
-
Always self-close tags that have no children.
// bad <Foo className="stuff"></Foo> // good <Foo className="stuff" />
-
If your component has multi-line properties, close its tag on a new line.
// bad <Foo bar="bar" baz="baz" /> // good <Foo bar="bar" baz="baz" />
- Do not use underscore prefix for internal methods of a React component.
// bad React.createClass({ _onClickSubmit() { // do stuff } // other stuff }); // good class extends React.Component { onClickSubmit() { // do stuff } // other stuff });
- Ordering for class extends React.Component:
- constructor
- optional static methods
- getChildContext
- componentWillMount
- componentDidMount
- componentWillReceiveProps
- shouldComponentUpdate
- componentWillUpdate
- componentDidUpdate
- componentWillUnmount
- clickHandlers or eventHandlers like onClickSubmit() or onChangeDescription()
- getter methods for render like getSelectReason() or getFooterContent()
- Optional render methods like renderNavigation() or renderProfilePicture()
- render
- How to define propTypes, defaultProps, contextTypes, etc...
import React, { Component, PropTypes } from 'react';
const propTypes = {
id: PropTypes.number.isRequired,
url: PropTypes.string.isRequired,
text: PropTypes.string,
};
const defaultProps = {
text: 'Hello World',
};
export default class Link extends Component {
static methodsAreOk() {
return true;
}
render() {
return <a href={this.props.url} data-id={this.props.id}>{this.props.text}</a>
}
}
Link.propTypes = propTypes;
Link.defaultProps = defaultProps;
- Ordering for React.createClass:
- displayName
- propTypes
- contextTypes
- childContextTypes
- mixins
- statics
- defaultProps
- getDefaultProps
- getInitialState
- getChildContext
- componentWillMount
- componentDidMount
- componentWillReceiveProps
- shouldComponentUpdate
- componentWillUpdate
- componentDidUpdate
- componentWillUnmount
- clickHandlers or eventHandlers like onClickSubmit() or onChangeDescription()
- getter methods for render like getSelectReason() or getFooterContent()
- Optional render methods like renderNavigation() or renderProfilePicture()
- render