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Full-Stack Flask and React

You're reading from  Full-Stack Flask and React

Product type Book
Published in Oct 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803248448
Pages 408 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Author (1):
Olatunde Adedeji Olatunde Adedeji
Profile icon Olatunde Adedeji
Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters close

Preface 1. Part 1 – Frontend Development with React
2. Chapter 1: Getting Full Stack Ready with React and Flask 3. Chapter 2: Getting Started with React 4. Chapter 3: Managing State with React Hooks 5. Chapter 4: Fetching Data with React APIs 6. Chapter 5: JSX and Displaying Lists in React 7. Chapter 6: Working with React Router and Forms 8. Chapter 7: React Unit Testing 9. Part 2 – Backend Development with Flask
10. Chapter 8: SQL and Data Modeling 11. Chapter 9: API Development and Documentation 12. Chapter 10: Integrating the React Frontend with the Flask Backend 13. Chapter 11: Fetching and Displaying Data in a React-Flask Application 14. Chapter 12: Authentication and Authorization 15. Chapter 13: Error Handling 16. Chapter 14: Modular Architecture – Harnessing the Power of Blueprints 17. Chapter 15: Flask Unit Testing 18. Chapter 16: Containerization and Flask Application Deployment 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Default and named exports

As mentioned earlier, ECMAScript 2015, also known as ES6, was a major milestone in the effort to improve standards in the JavaScript language. Among the new features added were modules and the ability to use import expressions. Modules allow us to better organize our code base into logical units. Basically, modules could be a function or related functions designed to perform specific tasks. They make code reusability across projects easier.

In React, we use a default export to make component functions, variables, classes, or objects available to other component files. Only one default export is allowed per file.

For instance, the following code makes it possible to import a file from the Speaker component:

import Speaker from './Speaker';

The following code makes it possible to export the file to another component file:

function App(){
    return (
    <div>  …  ...
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