I have an object:
import React, {Component} from 'react';
import ProgressBar from "./ProgressBar";
class Languages extends Component {
state = {
languages: [
{id: 1, value: "XXX", xp: 1.5},
{id: 2, value: "CCC", xp: 1},
{id: 3, value: "AAA", xp: 2}
]
}
render() {
let {languages} = this.state;
const levels = ['Test', 'Bad', 'Sorry']
return (
<div className="languages">
<ProgressBar
programming={languages}
className="languagesDisplay"
levels={levels}
title="Languages"
/>
</div>
);
}
}
export default Languages;
import React from 'react';
const ProgressBar = (props) => {
return (
<div className={props.className}>
<h3>{props.title}</h3>
<div className="years">
<span>Experiences</span>
props.levels.map((level) => {
<span>level</span>
})
</div>
<span>level</span>
return props.levels.map((level) =>level)
how can i display the const ['Test', 'Bad', 'Sorry']
from Languages.js in a <span>
in a different React file?
CodePudding user response:
Edit after seeing your response above: If the issue is just that the above code isn't working, here are a couple of things to check.
Inside of ProgressBar
you've got a couple of errors in your JSX. First, you need curly braces around your JavaScript interpolation and secondly, you're not returning anything in your .map() function. If you were using parentheses it would be an implicit return, but with the curly braces you need a return statement. Try this instead:
import React from 'react';
const ProgressBar = (props) => {
return ( <div className={props.className}>
<h3> {props.title} </h3>
<div className ="years">
<span> Experiences </span>
{props.levels.map((level) => {
return (<span>{level}</span>)
})
} </div>
)};
My initial answer, which still may be helpful for understanding what's going on:
It's not entirely clear what you want to do, but here are a couple of things that might be helpful.
What's happening in your code above is that the levels
variable, which is an array of strings, is being passed down from the parent component Languages
into the child component ProgressBar
via the props
object.
When ProgressBar
is called inside of Languages
, it's properties (or props) are set (programming
, className
, levels
, title
).
The levels={levels}
part means that the prop levels
on ProgressBar
is being set to the variable levels
(the array of strings).
Inside of ProgressBar
all of those properties are accessible in the props
object that's passed as an argument. That's why you're able to access that array of strings with props.levels.map()
which will map the array of strings however you tell it to (in this case by printing each individual item within a <span>
tag).
So, with that understanding of what's happening here, here are a couple of things you could do to access the levels
variable elsewhere in another file.
If levels
is a constant that you want to access in multiple places, you could move it outside of the body of your Languages component and export it to use it in other places.
That could look like:
import React, {
Component
} from 'react';
import ProgressBar from "./ProgressBar";
export const levels = ['Test', 'Bad', 'Sorry']
class Languages extends Component {
state = {
languages: [{
id: 1,
value: "XXX",
xp: 1.5
},
{
id: 2,
value: "CCC",
xp: 1
},
{
id: 3,
value: "AAA",
xp: 2
}
]
}
render() {
let {
languages
} = this.state;
return ( <
div className = "languages" >
<
ProgressBar programming = {
languages
}
className = "languagesDisplay"
levels = {
levels
}
title = "Languages" /
>
<
/div>
);
}
}
export default Languages;
By exporting it from the top level, you could import it in another file exactly as it is.
import { levels } from '/insert-first-file-location-here'
Another option is to pass the levels
variable into another component as a prop. This way if levels
gets changed at the top level, those changes will drill down into subsequent components.
import React, {Component} from 'react';
import ProgressBar from "./ProgressBar";
class Languages extends Component {
state = {
languages: [
{id: 1, value: "XXX", xp: 1.5},
{id: 2, value: "CCC", xp: 1},
{id: 3, value: "AAA", xp: 2}
]
}
render() {
let {languages} = this.state;
const levels = ['Test', 'Bad', 'Sorry']
return (
<>
<div className="languages">
<ProgressBar
programming={languages}
className="languagesDisplay"
levels={levels}
title="Languages"
/>
</div>
<AnotherComponentThatUsesLevels
levels={levels} />
</>
);
}
}
export default Languages;
And then
import React from 'react'
export const AnotherComponentThatUsesLevels (props) => {
return (
<>
{/* do something with levels here, maybe map them like before*/}
{props.levels.map((level) => (<span>{level}</span>)}
</>
)
}
Does that help understand what's happening in the example and give you a couple of ways you could use that variable in another location?
CodePudding user response:
You need to export that const from your file like that:
import React, {Component} from 'react';
import ProgressBar from "./ProgressBar";
export const levels = ['Test', 'Bad', 'Sorry']
class Languages extends Component {
state = {
languages: [
{id: 1, value: "XXX", xp: 1.5},
{id: 2, value: "CCC", xp: 1},
{id: 3, value: "AAA", xp: 2}
]
}
render() {
let {languages} = this.state;
return (
<div className="languages">
<ProgressBar
programming={languages}
className="languagesDisplay"
levels={levels}
title="Languages"
/>
</div>
);
}
}
export default Languages;
After it u need to import it to file where u want to use it:
import {levels} from '*your filepath*'