Naveera A.
—You have a set of elements, and you’d like to loop over them to generate a JSX partial.
In templating languages, you can write a for
loop directly inside the template. For example, you can use the following code to loop over a list in Jinja:
{% for i in range(11) %} <li>{{ i }}</li> {% endfor %}
How can you do the same thing using JSX?
Two ways you can loop inside JSX are using traditional loops or using the map()
method.
If you have a set of elements, you can use normal JavaScript for
, for of
, and for in
loops outside the return
block.
Inside the return
block, you can use the resulting array.
You can loop over an array and create JSX partials like so:
import React from "react"; function App() { const seasons = ["Spring", "Summer", "Autumn", "Winter"]; let seasonsList = []; seasons.forEach((season, index) => { seasonsList.push(<li key={index}>{season}</li>); }); return ( <div> <h2>Seasons of the year</h2> <ul>{seasonsList}</ul> </div> ); } export default App;
map()
MethodYou can use the map()
method on an array to loop through the elements and create components, or generate JSX, inside the return
block.
import React from "react"; function App() { const seasons = ["Spring", "Summer", "Autumn", "Winter"]; return ( <div> <h2>Seasons of the year</h2> <ul> {seasons.map((season) => ( <li key={season.id}>{season}</li> ))} </ul> </div> ); } export default App;
Many developers prefer using map()
to loop over arrays.
If you’re looking to get a deeper understanding of how React application monitoring works, take a look at the following articles:
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