Your First Component

Components are one of the core concepts of React. They are the foundation upon which you build user interfaces (UI), which makes them the perfect place to start your React journey!

You will learn

  • What a component is
  • What role components play in a React application
  • How to write your first React component

Components: UI building blocks

On the Web, HTML lets us create rich structured documents with its built-in set of tags like <h1> and <li>:

<article>
<h1>My First Component</h1>
<ol>
<li>Components: UI Building Blocks</li>
<li>Defining a Component</li>
<li>Using a Component</li>
</ol>
</article>

This markup represents this article <article>, its heading <h1>, and an (abbreviated) table of contents as an ordered list <ol>. Markup like this, combined with CSS for style, and JavaScript for interactivity, lies behind every sidebar, avatar, modal, dropdown—every piece of UI you see on the Web.

React lets you combine your markup, CSS, and JavaScript into custom “components”, reusable UI elements for your app. The table of contents code you saw above could be turned into a <TableOfContents /> component you could render on every page. Under the hood, it still uses the same HTML tags like <article>, <h1>, etc.

Just like with HTML tags, you can compose, order and nest components to design whole pages. For example, the documentation page you’re reading is made out of React components:

<PageLayout>
<NavigationHeader>
<SearchBar />
<Link to="/docs">Docs</Link>
</NavigationHeader>
<Sidebar />
<PageContent>
<TableOfContents />
<DocumentationText />
</PageContent>
</PageLayout>

As your project grows, you will notice that many of your designs can be composed by reusing components you already wrote, speeding up your development. Our table of contents above could be added to any screen with <TableOfContents />! You can even jumpstart your project with the thousands of components shared by the React open source community like Chakra UI and Material UI.

Defining a component

Traditionally when creating web pages, web developers marked up their content and then added interaction by sprinkling on some JavaScript. This worked great when interaction was a nice-to-have on the web. Now it is expected for many sites and all apps. React puts interactivity first while still using the same technology: a React component is a JavaScript function that you can sprinkle with markup. Here’s what that looks like (you can edit the example below):

export default function Profile() { return ( <img src="https://i.imgur.com/MK3eW3Am.jpg" alt="Katherine Johnson" /> ) }

And here’s how to build a component:

Step 1: Export the component

The export default prefix is a standard JavaScript syntax (not specific to React). It lets you mark the main function in a file so that you can later import it from other files. (More on importing in Importing and Exporting Components!)

Step 2: Define the function

With function Profile() { } you define a JavaScript function with the name Profile.

Pitfall

React components are regular JavaScript functions, but their names must start with a capital letter or they won’t work!

Step 3: Add markup

The component returns an <img /> tag with src and alt attributes. <img /> is written like HTML, but it is actually JavaScript under the hood! This syntax is called JSX, and it lets you embed markup inside JavaScript.

Return statements can be written all on one line, as in this component:

return <img src="https://i.imgur.com/MK3eW3As.jpg" alt="Katherine Johnson" />;

But if your markup isn’t all on the same line as the return keyword, you must wrap it in a pair of parentheses:

return (
<div>
<img src="https://i.imgur.com/MK3eW3As.jpg" alt="Katherine Johnson" />
</div>
);

Pitfall

Without parentheses, any code on the lines after return will be ignored!

Using a component

Now that you’ve defined your Profile component, you can nest it inside other components. For example, you can export a Gallery component that uses multiple Profile components:

function Profile() { return ( <img src="https://i.imgur.com/MK3eW3As.jpg" alt="Katherine Johnson" /> ); } export default function Gallery() { return ( <section> <h1>Amazing scientists</h1> <Profile /> <Profile /> <Profile /> </section> ); }

What the browser sees

Notice the difference in casing:

  • <section> is lowercase, so React knows we refer to an HTML tag.
  • <Profile /> starts with a capital P, so React knows that we want to use our component called Profile.

And Profile contains even more HTML: <img />. In the end, this is what the browser sees:

<section>
<h1>Amazing scientists</h1>
<img src="https://i.imgur.com/MK3eW3As.jpg" alt="Katherine Johnson" />
<img src="https://i.imgur.com/MK3eW3As.jpg" alt="Katherine Johnson" />
<img src="https://i.imgur.com/MK3eW3As.jpg" alt="Katherine Johnson" />
</section>

Nesting and organizing components

Components are regular JavaScript functions, so you can keep multiple components in the same file. This is convenient when components are relatively small or tightly related to each other. If this file gets crowded, you can always move Profile to a separate file. You will learn how to do this shortly on the page about imports.

Because the Profile components are rendered inside Gallery—even several times!—we can say that Gallery is a parent component, rendering each Profile as a “child”. This is part of the magic of React: you can define a component once, and then use it in as many places and as many times as you like.

Pitfall

Components can render other components, but you must never nest their definitions:

export default function Gallery() {
// 🔴 Never define a component inside another component!
function Profile() {
// ...
}
// ...
}

The snippet above is very slow and causes bugs. Instead, define every component at the top level:

export default function Gallery() {
// ...
}

// ✅ Declare components at the top level
function Profile() {
// ...
}

When a child component needs some data from a parent, pass it by props instead of nesting definitions.

Deep Dive

Components all the way down

Your React application begins at a “root” component. Usually, it is created automatically when you start a new project. For example, if you use CodeSandbox or Create React App, the root component is defined in src/App.js. If you use the framework Next.js, the root component is defined in pages/index.js. In these examples, you’ve been exporting root components.

Most React apps use components all the way down. This means that you won’t only use components for reusable pieces like buttons, but also for larger pieces like sidebars, lists, and ultimately, complete pages! Components are a handy way to organize UI code and markup, even if some of them are only used once.

React-based frameworks take this a step further. Instead of using an empty HTML file and letting React “take over” managing the page with JavaScript, they also generate the HTML automatically from your React components. This allows your app to show some content before the JavaScript code loads.

Still, many websites only use React to add interactivity to existing HTML pages. They have many root components instead of a single one for the entire page. You can use as much—or as little—React as you need.

Recap

You’ve just gotten your first taste of React! Let’s recap some key points.

  • React lets you create components, reusable UI elements for your app.

  • In a React app, every piece of UI is a component.

  • React components are regular JavaScript functions except:

    1. Their names always begin with a capital letter.
    2. They return JSX markup.

Challenge 1 of 4:
Export the component

This sandbox doesn’t work because the root component is not exported:

function Profile() { return ( <img src="https://i.imgur.com/lICfvbD.jpg" alt="Aklilu Lemma" /> ); }

Try to fix it yourself before looking at the solution!