I have a LoginForm component. I want to check before submit, that both loginName
and password
is set. I tried with this code (a lot of stuff omitte
React was binding callbacks to this for you before. But now it is gone, and you have to bind it yourself or make wrapper like
onSubmit={() => this.submit()}
You have not bound the this
to your class; You can use ES6 class properties feature to get around the problem in the cleanest way; So all you need to do is:
submit = (e) => {
// some code here
}
The arrow function will auto bind it; Much nicer than binding it in a constructor; the most important thing is never ever do it this way:
onSubmit={() => this.submit()}
This will create a function which is an object in javascript and it will take some memory and is now residing inside your redner function! which makes it so expensive. render
function is part of the code that runs so many times and each time your submit
function is also created and you will end up with some performance relates issues. So your code should be like:
class LoginForm extends Component {
submit = (e) => {
// some code here
}
render() {
return (
<form className="login" onSubmit={ this.submit }>
<button type="submit" className="btn btn-default">Sign in</button>
</form>
);
}
}
export default LoginForm;
Here you will not have the performance issue, also you will not have the binding issue and your code looks much nicer.
For those who is using Babel, you can use bind operator with transform-function-bind plugin:
onSubmit={::this.submit}
which is a syntactic sugar for:
onSubmit={this.submit.bind(this)}
You need set this
for submit
method because now this
is undefined
, for this operation you can use .bind
onSubmit={ this.submit.bind(this) }
Example
or you can use arrow function
onSubmit={ (e) => this.submit(e) }
Example