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more-about-refs More About Refs docs more-about-refs.html working-with-the-browser.html tooling-integration.html

After returning the structure of your UI from the render method, you may find yourself wanting to "reach out" and invoke methods on component instances returned from render. Often, doing something like this isn't necessary for making data flow through your application, because the Reactive data flow always ensures that the most recent props are sent to each child that is output from render(). However there are a few cases, where it still might be necessary or beneficial.

Consider the case when you wish to tell an <input /> element (that exists within your instances sub-hierarchy) to focus after you update its value to be the empty string, ''.

  var App = React.createClass({
    getInitialState: function() {
      return {userInput: ''};
    },
    handleKeyUp: function(e) {
      this.setState({userInput: e.target.value});
    },
    clearAndFocusInput: function() {
      this.setState({userInput: ''}); // Clear the input
      // We wish to focus the <input /> now!
    },
    render: function() {
      return (
        <div>
          <div onClick={this.clearAndFocusInput}>
            Click To Focus and Reset
          </div>
          <input
            value={this.state.userInput}
            onKeyUp={this.handleKeyUp}
          />
        </div>
      );
    }
  });

Notice how, in this example, we want to "tell" the input something - something that it cannot infer from its props over time. In this case we want to "tell" it that it should now become focused. However, there are some challenges. What is returned from render() is not your actual composition of "child" components, it is merely a description of the children at a particular instance in time - a snapshot, if you will.

Note:

Remember, what you return from render() is not your actual rendered children instances. What you return from render() is merely a description of the children instances in your component's sub-hierarchy at a particular moment in time.

This means that you should never "hold onto" something that you return from render() and then expect it to be anything meaningful.

  // counterexample: DO NOT DO THIS!
  render: function() {
    var myInput = <input />;          // I'm going to try to call methods on this
    this.rememberThisInput = myInput; // input at some point in the future! YAY!
    return (
      <div>
        <div>...</div>
        {myInput}
      </div>
    );
  }

In this counterexample, the <input /> is merely a description of an <input />. This description is used to create a real backing instance for the <input />.

So how do we talk to the real backing instance of the input?

The ref Attribute

React supports a very special property that you can attach to any component that is output from render(). This special property allows you to refer to the corresponding backing instance of anything returned from render(). It is always guaranteed to be the proper instance, at any point in time.

It's as simple as:

1. Assign a ref attribute to anything returned from render such as:

   <input ref="myInput" />

2. In some other code (typically event handler code), access the backing instance via this.refs as in:

  this.refs.myInput

Completing the Example

  var App = React.createClass({
    getInitialState: function() {
      return {userInput: ''};
    },
    handleKeyUp: function(e) {
      this.setState({userInput: e.target.value});
    },
    clearAndFocusInput: function() {
      this.setState({userInput: ''}); // Clear the input
      this.refs.theInput.getDOMNode().focus();   // Boom! Focused!
    },
    render: function() {
      return (
        <div>
          <div onClick={this.clearAndFocusInput}>
            Click To Focus and Reset
          </div>
          <input
            ref="theInput"
            value={this.state.userInput}
            onKeyUp={this.handleKeyUp}
          />
        </div>
      );
    }
  });

In this example, our render function returns a description of an <input /> instance. But the true instance is accessed via this.refs.theInput. As long as a child component with ref="theInput" is returned from render, this.refs.theInput will access the proper instance. This even works on higher level (non-DOM) components such as <Typeahead ref="myTypeahead" />.

Summary

Refs are a great way to send a message to a particular child instance in a way that would be inconvenient to do via streaming Reactive props and state. They should, however, not be your go-to abstraction for flowing data through your application. By default, use the Reactive data flow and save refs for use cases that are inherently non-reactive.

Benefits:

  • You can define any public method on your component classes (such as a reset method on a Typeahead) and call those public methods through refs (such as this.refs.myTypeahead.reset()).
  • Performing DOM measurements almost always requires reaching out to a "native" component such as <input /> and accessing its underlying DOM node via this.refs.myInput.getDOMNode(). Refs are one of the only practical ways of doing this reliably.
  • Refs are automatically book-kept for you! If that child is destroyed, its ref is also destroyed for you. No worrying about memory here (unless you do something crazy to retain a reference yourself).

Cautions:

  • Never access refs inside of any component's render method - or while any component's render method is even running anywhere in the call stack.
  • If you want to preserve Google Closure Compiler Crushing resilience, make sure to never access as a property what was specified as a string. This means you must access using this.refs['myRefString'] if your ref was defined as ref="myRefString".
  • If you have not programmed several apps with React, your first inclination is usually going to be to try to use refs to "make things happen" in your app. If this is the case, take a moment and think more critically about where state should be owned in the component hierarchy. Often, it becomes clear that the proper place to "own" that state is at a higher level in the hierarchy. Placing the state there often eliminates any desire to use refs to "make things happen" - instead, the data flow will usually accomplish your goal.