The code in the render method represents the component at any given time.
If you do something like this, the user won’t be able to make selections using the form control:
<select value="Radish">
<option value="Orange">Orange</option>
<option value="Radish">Radish</option>
<option value="Cherry">Cherry</option>
</select>
So there are two solutions for working with forms controls:
- Controlled Components Use component
stateto reflect the user’s selections. This provides the most control, since any changes you make tostatewill be reflected in the component’s rendering:
example:
var FruitSelector = React.createClass({
getInitialState:function(){
return {selectValue:'Radish'};
},
handleChange:function(e){
this.setState({selectValue:e.target.value});
},
render: function() {
var message="You selected "+this.state.selectValue;
return (
<div>
<select
value={this.state.selectValue}
onChange={this.handleChange}
>
<option value="Orange">Orange</option>
<option value="Radish">Radish</option>
<option value="Cherry">Cherry</option>
</select>
<p>{message}</p>
</div>
);
}
});
React.render(<FruitSelector name="World" />, document.body);
JSFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/xe5ypghv/
-
Uncontrolled Components The other option is to not control the value and simply respond to
onChangeevents. In this case you can use thedefaultValueprop to set an initial value.<div> <select defaultValue={this.state.selectValue} onChange={this.handleChange} > <option value="Orange">Orange</option> <option value="Radish">Radish</option> <option value="Cherry">Cherry</option> </select> <p>{message}</p> </div>
http://jsfiddle.net/kb3gN/10396/
The docs for this are great: http://facebook.github.io/react/docs/forms.html
and also show how to work with multiple selections.
UPDATE
A variant of Option 1 (using a controlled component) is to use Redux and React-Redux to create a container component. This involves connect and a mapStateToProps function, which is easier than it sounds but probably overkill if you’re just starting out.