Correct way to define an empty dom element in React
Use false
, null
or undefined
.
This snippet shows the behaviour of rendering falsy values in React:
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<script src="https://fb.me/react-0.13.2.js"></script>
<script src="https://fb.me/JSXTransformer-0.13.2.js"></script>
<div id="app"></div>
<script type="text/jsx;harmony=true">void function() { "use strict";
var falsyValues = [false, 0, "" , null, undefined, NaN]
var App = React.createClass({
componentDidMount() {
[].slice.call(React.findDOMNode(this).childNodes)
.forEach(child => console.log(child.outerHTML))
},
render() {
return <div>
{falsyValues.map(falsy => <div id={'test-' + falsy}>
Before
{falsy}
After
</div>)}
</div>
}
})
React.render(<App/>, document.getElementById('app'))
}()</script>
false
, null
and undefined
don't generate anything:
<div id="test-false" data-reactid=".0.0"><span data-reactid=".0.0.0">Before</span><span data-reactid=".0.0.2">After</span></div>
<div id="test-null" data-reactid=".0.3"><span data-reactid=".0.3.0">Before</span><span data-reactid=".0.3.2">After</span></div>
<div id="test-undefined" data-reactid=".0.4"><span data-reactid=".0.4.0">Before</span><span data-reactid=".0.4.2">After</span></div>
Whereas ''
, 0
and NaN
do:
<div id="test-0" data-reactid=".0.1"><span data-reactid=".0.1.0">Before</span><span data-reactid=".0.1.1">0</span><span data-reactid=".0.1.2">After</span></div>
<div id="test-" data-reactid=".0.2"><span data-reactid=".0.2.0">Before</span><span data-reactid=".0.2.1"></span><span data-reactid=".0.2.2">After</span></div>
<div id="test-NaN" data-reactid=".0.5"><span data-reactid=".0.5.0">Before</span><span data-reactid=".0.5.1">NaN</span><span data-reactid=".0.5.2">After</span></div>
As a convenience. you can conditionally generate content inline if the value you're testing against will be false
, null
or undefined
when the conditional content shouldn't be displayed:
<div>
...
{this.props.checkbox && <span className='checkbox'></span>}
...
</div>
You need to use null. If you use an empty string like '' then react will create an empty span dom element, so it's not the same.
var label1 = <label>My Label</label>; // react generates a label element
var label2 = null; // react doesn't generate any dom element
var label3 = ''; // react generates and empty span like <span></span>