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ReactComponent

Instances of a React Component are created internally in React when rendering. These instances are reused in subsequent renders, and can be accessed in your component methods as this. The only way to get a handle to a React Component instance outside of React is by storing the return value of React.render. Inside other Components, you may use refs to achieve the same result.

setState

setState(object nextState[, function callback])

Merges nextState with the current state. This is the primary method you use to trigger UI updates from event handlers and server request callbacks. In addition, you can supply an optional callback function that is executed once setState is completed and the component is re-rendered.

Notes:

NEVER mutate this.state directly, as calling setState() afterwards may replace the mutation you made. Treat this.state as if it were immutable.

setState() does not immediately mutate this.state but creates a pending state transition. Accessing this.state after calling this method can potentially return the existing value.

There is no guarantee of synchronous operation of calls to setState and calls may be batched for performance gains.

setState() will always trigger a re-render unless conditional rendering logic is implemented in shouldComponentUpdate(). If mutable objects are being used and the logic cannot be implemented in shouldComponentUpdate(), calling setState() only when the new state differs from the previous state will avoid unnecessary re-renders.

replaceState

replaceState(object nextState[, function callback])

Like setState() but deletes any pre-existing state keys that are not in nextState.

forceUpdate()

forceUpdate([function callback])

If your render() method reads from something other than this.props or this.state, you'll need to tell React when it needs to re-run render() by calling forceUpdate(). You'll also need to call forceUpdate() if you mutate this.state directly.

Calling forceUpdate() will cause render() to be called on the component and its children, but React will still only update the DOM if the markup changes.

Normally you should try to avoid all uses of forceUpdate() and only read from this.props and this.state in render(). This makes your application much simpler and more efficient.

getDOMNode

DOMElement getDOMNode()

If this component has been mounted into the DOM, this returns the corresponding native browser DOM element. This method is useful for reading values out of the DOM, such as form field values and performing DOM measurements. When render returns null or false, this.getDOMNode() returns null.

isMounted()

bool isMounted()

isMounted() returns true if the component is rendered into the DOM, false otherwise. You can use this method to guard asynchronous calls to setState() or forceUpdate().

setProps

setProps(object nextProps[, function callback])

When you're integrating with an external JavaScript application you may want to signal a change to a React component rendered with React.render().

Though calling React.render() again on the same node is the preferred way to update a root-level component, you can also call setProps() to change its properties and trigger a re-render. In addition, you can supply an optional callback function that is executed once setProps is completed and the component is re-rendered.

Note:

When possible, the declarative approach of calling React.render() again is preferred; it tends to make updates easier to reason about. (There's no significant performance difference between the two approaches.)

This method can only be called on a root-level component. That is, it's only available on the component passed directly to React.render() and none of its children. If you're inclined to use setProps() on a child component, instead take advantage of reactive updates and pass the new prop to the child component when it's created in render().

replaceProps

replaceProps(object nextProps[, function callback])

Like setProps() but deletes any pre-existing props instead of merging the two objects.