Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@mactkg
Forked from chantastic/on-jsx.markdown
Created March 9, 2016 06:04
Show Gist options
  • Save mactkg/095f8c67304774557db9 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Save mactkg/095f8c67304774557db9 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
JSX, a year in

Hi Nicholas,

I saw you tweet about JSX yesterday. It seemed like the discussion devolved pretty quickly but I wanted to share our experience over the last year. I understand your concerns. I've made similar remarks about JSX. When we started using it Planning Center, I lead the charge to write React without it. I don't imagine I'd have much to say that you haven't considered but, if it's helpful, here's a pattern that changed my opinion:

The idea that "React is the V in MVC" is disingenuous. It's a good pitch but, for many of us, it feels like in invitation to repeat our history of coupled views. In practice, React is the V and the C. Dan Abramov describes the division as Smart and Dumb Components. At our office, we call them stateless and container components (view-controllers if we're Flux). The idea is pretty simple: components can't be concerned with both presentation and data-fetching. I feel like an example might be clearer...

A component like this would be rejected in code review for having both a presentation and data concern:

// CommentList.js

class CommentList extends React.Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);
    this.state = { comments: [] }
  }
  
  componentDidMount() {
    $.ajax({
      url: "/my-comments.json",
      dataType: 'json',
      success: function(comments) {
        this.setState({comments: comments});
      }.bind(this)
    });
  }
  
  render() {
    return <ul> {this.state.comments.map(renderComment)} </ul>;
  }
  
  renderComment({body, author}) {
    return <li>{body}{author}</li>;
  }
}

It would then be split into two components. The first is like a traditional template, concerned only with presentation, and the second is tasked with fetching data and rendering the related view component.

// CommentList.js

class CommentList extends React.Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);
  }
  
  render() { 
    return <ul> {this.props.comments.map(renderComment)} </ul>;
  }
  
  renderComment({body, author}) {
    return <li>{body}{author}</li>;
  }
}
// CommentListContainer.js

class CommentListContainer extends React.Component {
  constructor() {
    super();
    this.state = { comments: [] }
  }
  
  componentDidMount() {
    $.ajax({
      url: "/my-comments.json",
      dataType: 'json',
      success: function(comments) {
        this.setState({comments: comments});
      }.bind(this)
    });
  }
  
  render() {
    return <CommentList comments={this.state.comments} />;
  }
}

In the updated example, CommentListContainer could shed JSX pretty simply.

  render() {
    return React.createElement(CommentList, { comments: this.state.comments });
  }

What does this have to do with disliking JSX?

When we started doing this, concerns about JSX vanished. Writing "dumb components" feels just the same as Handlebars or ERB templates but with the full power of JavaScript. We realized that it wasn't JSX that bothered us as much as the nagging feeling that components were just smaller balls of mud. For a while, our components were just smaller balls of mud but this pattern helped break the cycle.

I hope that this was a helpful addition to the conversation. I've written about it in slightly more detail here. You can also see Jason Bota's talk about how they do this at Facebook.

Cheers!

Michael

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment