React provides powerful abstractions that free you from touching the DOM directly in most cases, but sometimes you simply need to access the underlying API, perhaps to work with a third-party library or existing code.
React is very fast because it never talks to the DOM directly. React maintains a fast in-memory representation of the DOM. render()
methods actually return a description of the DOM, and React can compare this description with the in-memory representation to compute the fastest way to update the browser.
Additionally, React implements a full synthetic event system such that all event objects are guaranteed to conform to the W3C spec despite browser quirks, and everything bubbles consistently and efficiently across browsers. You can even use some HTML5 events in older browsers that don't ordinarily support them!
Most of the time you should stay within React's "faked browser" world since it's more performant and easier to reason about. However, sometimes you simply need to access the underlying API, perhaps to work with a third-party library like a jQuery plugin. React provides escape hatches for you to use the underlying DOM API directly.
To interact with the browser, you'll need a reference to a DOM node. You can attach a ref
to any element, which allows you to reference the backing instance of the component. This is useful if you need to invoke imperative functions on the component, or want to access the underlying DOM nodes. To learn more about refs, including ways to use them effectively, see our refs to components documentation.
Components have three main parts of their lifecycle:
React provides lifecycle methods that you can specify to hook into this process. We provide will methods, which are called right before something happens, and did methods which are called right after something happens.
getInitialState(): object
is invoked before a component is mounted. Stateful components should implement this and return the initial state data.componentWillMount()
is invoked immediately before mounting occurs.componentDidMount()
is invoked immediately after mounting occurs. Initialization that requires DOM nodes should go here.componentWillReceiveProps(object nextProps)
is invoked when a mounted component receives new props. This method should be used to compare this.props
and nextProps
to perform state transitions using this.setState()
.shouldComponentUpdate(object nextProps, object nextState): boolean
is invoked when a component decides whether any changes warrant an update to the DOM. Implement this as an optimization to compare this.props
with nextProps
and this.state
with nextState
and return false
if React should skip updating.componentWillUpdate(object nextProps, object nextState)
is invoked immediately before updating occurs. You cannot call this.setState()
here.componentDidUpdate(object prevProps, object prevState)
is invoked immediately after updating occurs.componentWillUnmount()
is invoked immediately before a component is unmounted and destroyed. Cleanup should go here.Mounted composite components also support the following method:
component.forceUpdate()
can be invoked on any mounted component when you know that some deeper aspect of the component's state has changed without using this.setState()
.React supports most popular browsers, including Internet Explorer 9 and above.
(We don't support older browsers that don't support ES5 methods, but you may find that your apps do work in older browsers if polyfills such as es5-shim and es5-sham are included in the page. You're on your own if you choose to take this path.)