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Why create constants from props and state in react?

Tags:

reactjs

I see this code pattern a lot in React code:

render() {
  const units = this.props.units;
  const temperature = this.state.temperature;

  return (<p>{temperature} {units}</p>);
}

and some developers I've asked say that its standard practice to pull state/props into local constants before using them in render or other functions - however, I can't find this practice discussed anywhere in the React docs, and the example code in those docs sometimes just access state/prop attributes directly.

I would prefer to use direct access because it makes the code more readable when you can immediately see where attributes are coming from instead of having to hunt down the local constant definitions.

Before I make this decision though, I was wondering if anyone knew why this practice exists and if there are good reasons to use it?

Is there a functional difference between the example above and this?

render() {
  return (<p>{this.state.temperature} {this.props.units}</p>);
}
like image 992
Cbas Avatar asked Nov 19 '25 02:11

Cbas


1 Answers

Its a standard practice to pull state/props when there a MANY props/state that are going to be used inside your functions

eg: const { prop1, prop2, prop3, prop4, ... } = this.props
    const { state1, state2, state3, ... } = this.state

You can now reference them with the const names instead of

this.props.propName/stateName everywhere.

You shouldn't do that in the example you provided where there is just 1/few props/state

const units = this.props.units; // Not recommended

Bottomline : Just cleaner code. Matter of preference.

like image 173
varoons Avatar answered Nov 21 '25 18:11

varoons



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