I want to make a list of fields depending on the number of the player that user has selected. I wanted to make something like this:
generatePaymentField() {
This should work
render(){
var payments = [];
for(let i = 0; i < noGuest; i++){
payments.push(
<View key = {i}>
<View>
<TextInput />
</View>
<View>
<TextInput />
</View>
<View>
<TextInput />
</View>
</View>
)
}
return (
<View>
<View>
<View><Text>No</Text></View>
<View><Text>Name</Text></View>
<View><Text>Preference</Text></View>
</View>
{ payments }
</View>
)
}
render() {
var myloop = [];
for (let i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
myloop.push(
<View key={i}>
<Text>{i}</Text>
</View>
);
}
return (
<View >
<Text >Welcome to React Native!</Text>
{myloop}
</View>
);
}
}
First of all, I recommend writing the item you want to render multiple times (in your case list of fields) as a separate component:
function Field() {
return (
<View>
<View>
<TextInput />
</View>
<View>
<TextInput />
</View>
<View>
<TextInput />
</View>
</View>
);
}
Then, in your case, when rendering based on some number and not a list, I'd move the for loop outside of the render method for a more readable code:
renderFields() {
const noGuest = this.state.guest;
const fields = [];
for (let i=0; i < noGuest; i++) {
// Try avoiding the use of index as a key, it has to be unique!
fields.push(
<Field key={"guest_"+i} />
);
}
return fields;
}
render () {
return (
<View>
<View>
<View><Text>No</Text></View>
<View><Text>Name</Text></View>
<View><Text>Preference</Text></View>
</View>
{this.renderFields()}
</View>;
)
}
However, there are many more ways to render looped content in react native. Most of the ways are covered in this article, so please check it out if you're interested in more details! The examples in article are from React, but everything applies to React Native as well!
You can create render the results (payments) and use a fancy way to iterate over items instead of adding a for loop.
const noGuest = 3;
Array(noGuest).fill(noGuest).map(guest => {
console.log(guest);
});
Example:
renderPayments(noGuest) {
return Array(noGuest).fill(noGuest).map((guess, index) => {
return(
<View key={index}>
<View><TextInput /></View>
<View><TextInput /></View>
<View><TextInput /></View>
</View>
);
}
}
Then use it where you want it
render() {
return(
const { guest } = this.state;
...
{this.renderPayments(guest)}
);
}
Hope you got the idea.
If you want to understand this in simple Javascript check Array.prototype.fill()
renderItem(item)
{
const width = '80%';
var items = [];
for(let i = 0; i < item.count; i++){
items.push( <View style={{ padding: 10, borderBottomColor: "#f2f2f2", borderBottomWidth: 10, flexDirection: 'row' }}>
<View style={{ width }}>
<Text style={styles.name}>{item.title}</Text>
<Text style={{ color: '#818181', paddingVertical: 10 }}>{item.taskDataElements[0].description + " "}</Text>
<Text style={styles.begin}>BEGIN</Text>
</View>
<Text style={{ backgroundColor: '#fcefec', padding: 10, color: 'red', height: 40 }}>{this.msToTime(item.minTatTimestamp) <= 0 ? "NOW" : this.msToTime(item.minTatTimestamp) + "hrs"}</Text>
</View> )
}
return items;
}
render() {
return (this.renderItem(this.props.item))
}
render() {
var myloop = [];
for (let i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
myloop.push(
<View key={i}>
<Text style={{ textAlign: 'center', marginTop: 5 }} >{i}</Text>
</View>
);
}
return (
<View >
<Text >Welcome to React Native!</Text>
{myloop}
</View>
);
}
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