Reputation: 7121
Is it at all possible to update object's properties with setState
?
Something like:
this.state = {
jasper: { name: 'jasper', age: 28 },
}
I have tried:
this.setState({jasper.name: 'someOtherName'});
and this:
this.setState({jasper: {name: 'someothername'}})
The first results in a syntax error and the second just does nothing. Any ideas?
Upvotes: 493
Views: 786937
Reputation: 121
Try this, it should work just fine
this.setState(Object.assign(this.state.jasper,{name:'someOtherName'}));
Upvotes: 11
Reputation: 104529
There are multiple ways of doing this. Since state update is an async operation, to update the state object, we need to use updater function with setState
.
1- Simplest one:
First create a copy of jasper
then, make the changes in that:
this.setState(prevState => {
let jasper = Object.assign({}, prevState.jasper); // creating copy of state variable jasper
jasper.name = 'someothername'; // update the name property, assign a new value
return { jasper }; // return new object jasper object
})
Instead of using Object.assign
we can also write it like this:
let jasper = { ...prevState.jasper };
2- Using spread syntax:
this.setState(prevState => ({
jasper: { // object that we want to update
...prevState.jasper, // keep all other key-value pairs
name: 'something' // update the value of specific key
}
}))
Note: Object.assign
and Spread Operator
create only shallow copy, so if you have defined nested object or array of objects, you need a different approach.
Assume you have defined state as:
this.state = {
food: {
sandwich: {
capsicum: true,
crackers: true,
mayonnaise: true
},
pizza: {
jalapeno: true,
extraCheese: false
}
}
}
To update extraCheese
of pizza object:
this.setState(prevState => ({
food: {
...prevState.food, // copy all other key-value pairs of food object
pizza: { // specific object of food object
...prevState.food.pizza, // copy all pizza key-value pairs
extraCheese: true // update value of specific key
}
}
}))
Let;s assume you have a todo app, and you are managing the data in this form:
this.state = {
todoItems: [
{
name: 'Learn React Basics',
status: 'pending'
}, {
name: 'Check Codebase',
status: 'pending'
}
]
}
To update the status of any todo object, run a map on the array and check for some unique value of each object. In case of condition=true
, return the new object with updated value, else same object.
let key = 2;
this.setState(prevState => ({
todoItems: prevState.todoItems.map(
el => el.key === key? { ...el, status: 'done' }: el
)
}))
Suggestion: If object doesn't have a unique value, then use array index.
Upvotes: 1048
Reputation: 1311
Create a state object
this.state = {
objName: {
propertyOne: "",
propertyTwo: ""
}
};
Update state using setState
this.setState(prevState => ({
objName: {
...prevState.objName,
propertyOne: "Updated Value",
propertyTwo: "Updated value"
}
}));
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 1094
Using hooks in Functional Component:
const [state, setState] = useState({jasper: { name: 'jasper', age: 28 }})
const nameChangeHandler = () => {
setState(prevState => ({
...prevState,
prevState.jasper.name = "Anurag",
prevState.jasper.age = 28
})
)
}
In these cases It is recommended to use callback-based approach to update the state , because using this approach it is ensured that previously states are fully updated and we're updating based on previously updated state.
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 6693
Using hook we can do following way
const [student, setStudent] = React.useState({name: 'jasper', age: 28});
setStudent((prevState) => ({
...prevState,
name: 'newName',
}));
Upvotes: 31
Reputation: 1167
Sample FC:
const [formData, setformData] = useState({
project_admin_permissions: {
task_forms: false,
auto_assign_rules: false,
project_notes: true,
alerts: false,
update_criteria: true,
project_flow: false,
reports: false,
}
})
const handleChangeCheckBox = (e) => {
setformData({
...formData, project_admin_permissions: { ...formData.project_admin_permissions, [e.target.name]: e.target.checked }
})
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 129
By using the input html input name attribute we can have a more dynamic approach in order to update an object properties.
<input type="text" name="fname" handleChange={(e: any) => { updatePerson(e) }}/>
<input type="text" name="lname" handleChange={(e: any) => { updatePerson(e) }}/>
React / TSX object.assign
const [person, setPerson] = useState<IPerson>({});
function updatePerson(e: React.ChangeEvent<HTMLInputElement>): void {
const { name, value } = e.currentTarget;
setPerson(prevState => {
const newState = Object.assign(person, { [name]: value })
return { ...prevState, ...newState };
});
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 101
e.g. let say your state object is
serviceDays: {
Sunday: true,
Monday: true,
Tuesday: false,
Wednesday: true,
Thurday: false,
Friday: true,
Saturday: true
}
so you can update in following way
const onDayClick = day => {
const { serviceDays } = this.state
this.setState(prevState => ({
serviceDays: {
...prevState.serviceDays,
[day]: serviceDays[day] ? false : true
}
}))
}
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 2121
Try with this:
const { jasper } = this.state; //Gets the object from state
jasper.name = 'A new name'; //do whatever you want with the object
this.setState({jasper}); //Replace the object in state
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 467
Your second approach doesn't work because {name: 'someothername'}
equals {name: 'someothername', age: undefined}
, so theundefined
would overwrite original age value.
When it comes to change state in nested objects, a good approach would be Immutable.js
this.state = {
jasper: Record({name: 'jasper', age: 28})
}
const {jasper} = this.state
this.setState({jasper: jasper.set(name, 'someothername')})
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 3796
this is another solution using immer immutabe utility, very suited for deeply nested objects with ease, and you should not care about mutation
this.setState(
produce(draft => {
draft.jasper.name = 'someothername'
})
)
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 438
This setup worked for me:
let newState = this.state.jasper;
newState.name = 'someOtherName';
this.setState({newState: newState});
console.log(this.state.jasper.name); //someOtherName
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1216
I know there are a lot of answers here, but I'm surprised none of them create a copy of the new object outside of setState, and then simply setState({newObject}). Clean, concise and reliable. So in this case:
const jasper = { ...this.state.jasper, name: 'someothername' }
this.setState(() => ({ jasper }))
Or for a dynamic property (very useful for forms)
const jasper = { ...this.state.jasper, [VarRepresentingPropertyName]: 'new value' }
this.setState(() => ({ jasper }))
Upvotes: 33
Reputation: 1872
This is the fastest and the most readable way:
this.setState({...this.state.jasper, name: 'someothername'});
Even if this.state.jasper
already contains a name property, the new name name: 'someothername'
with be used.
Upvotes: 83
Reputation: 31
You can try with this: (Note: name of input tag === field of object)
<input name="myField" type="text"
value={this.state.myObject.myField}
onChange={this.handleChangeInpForm}>
</input>
-----------------------------------------------------------
handleChangeInpForm = (e) => {
let newObject = this.state.myObject;
newObject[e.target.name] = e.target.value;
this.setState({
myObject: newObject
})
}
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 537
I used this solution.
If you have a nested state like this:
this.state = {
formInputs:{
friendName:{
value:'',
isValid:false,
errorMsg:''
},
friendEmail:{
value:'',
isValid:false,
errorMsg:''
}
}
}
you can declare the handleChange function that copy current status and re-assigns it with changed values
handleChange(el) {
let inputName = el.target.name;
let inputValue = el.target.value;
let statusCopy = Object.assign({}, this.state);
statusCopy.formInputs[inputName].value = inputValue;
this.setState(statusCopy);
}
here the html with the event listener. Make sure to use the same name used into state object (in this case 'friendName')
<input type="text" onChange={this.handleChange} " name="friendName" />
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 692
Without using Async and Await Use this...
funCall(){
this.setState({...this.state.jasper, name: 'someothername'});
}
If you using with Async And Await use this...
async funCall(){
await this.setState({...this.state.jasper, name: 'someothername'});
}
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 189
Simple and dynamic way.
This will do the job, but you need to set all the ids to the parent so the parent will point to the name of the object, being id = "jasper" and name the name of the input element = property inside of the object jasper.
handleChangeObj = ({target: { id , name , value}}) => this.setState({ [id]: { ...this.state[id] , [name]: value } });
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 126
You can try with this:
this.setState(prevState => {
prevState = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(this.state.jasper));
prevState.name = 'someOtherName';
return {jasper: prevState}
})
or for other property:
this.setState(prevState => {
prevState = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(this.state.jasper));
prevState.age = 'someOtherAge';
return {jasper: prevState}
})
Or you can use handleChage function:
handleChage(event) {
const {name, value} = event.target;
this.setState(prevState => {
prevState = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(this.state.jasper));
prevState[name] = value;
return {jasper: prevState}
})
}
and HTML code:
<input
type={"text"}
name={"name"}
value={this.state.jasper.name}
onChange={this.handleChange}
/>
<br/>
<input
type={"text"}
name={"age"}
value={this.state.jasper.age}
onChange={this.handleChange}
/>
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 1325
Use spread operator and some ES6 here
this.setState({
jasper: {
...this.state.jasper,
name: 'something'
}
})
Upvotes: 41
Reputation: 199
Also, following Alberto Piras solution, if you don't want to copy all the "state" object:
handleChange(el) {
let inputName = el.target.name;
let inputValue = el.target.value;
let jasperCopy = Object.assign({}, this.state.jasper);
jasperCopy[inputName].name = inputValue;
this.setState({jasper: jasperCopy});
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1672
Another option: define your variable out of the Jasper object and then just call a variable.
Spread operator: ES6
this.state = { jasper: { name: 'jasper', age: 28 } }
let foo = "something that needs to be saved into state"
this.setState(prevState => ({
jasper: {
...jasper.entity,
foo
}
})
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 1022
The first case is indeed a syntax error.
Since I can't see the rest of your component, it's hard to see why you're nesting objects in your state here. It's not a good idea to nest objects in component state. Try setting your initial state to be:
this.state = {
name: 'jasper',
age: 28
}
That way, if you want to update the name, you can just call:
this.setState({
name: 'Sean'
});
Will that achieve what you're aiming for?
For larger, more complex data stores, I would use something like Redux. But that's much more advanced.
The general rule with component state is to use it only to manage UI state of the component (e.g. active, timers, etc.)
Check out these references:
Upvotes: 3