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Full Stack Development with Spring Boot 3 and React - Fourth Edition

You're reading from  Full Stack Development with Spring Boot 3 and React - Fourth Edition

Product type Book
Published in Oct 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805122463
Pages 454 pages
Edition 4th Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Juha Hinkula Juha Hinkula
Profile icon Juha Hinkula
Toc

Table of Contents (23) Chapters close

Preface 1. Part I: Backend Programming with Spring Boot
2. Setting Up the Environment and Tools – Backend 3. Understanding Dependency Injection 4. Using JPA to Create and Access a Database 5. Creating a RESTful Web Service with Spring Boot 6. Securing Your Backend 7. Testing Your Backend 8. Part II: Frontend Programming with React
9. Setting Up the Environment and Tools – Frontend 10. Getting Started with React 11. Introduction to TypeScript 12. Consuming the REST API with React 13. Useful Third-Party Components for React 14. Part III: Full Stack Development
15. Setting Up the Frontend for Our Spring Boot RESTful Web Service 16. Adding CRUD Functionalities 17. Styling the Frontend with MUI 18. Testing React Apps 19. Securing Your Application 20. Deploying Your Application 21. Other Books You May Enjoy
22. Index

Handling forms with React

Form handling is a little bit different with React. An HTML form will navigate to the next page when it is submitted. In React, often, we want to invoke a JavaScript function that has access to form data after submission, and avoid navigating to the next page. We already covered how to avoid submission in the previous section using preventDefault().

Let’s first create a minimalistic form with one input field and a Submit button. In order to get the value of the input field, we use the onChange event handler. We use the useState hook to create a state variable called text. When the value of the input field is changed, the new value will be saved to the state. This component is called a controlled component because form data is handled by React. In an uncontrolled component, the form data is handled only by the DOM.

The setText(event.target.value) statement gets the value from the input field and saves it to the state. Finally, we will show the...

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