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问题:
I'm rendering a link with react:
render: ->
`<a className="upvotes" onClick={this.upvote}>upvote</a>`
Then, above I have the upvote function:
upvote: ->
// do stuff (ajax)
Before link I had span in that place but I need to switch to link and here's the trouble - every time I click on .upvotes
the page gets refreshed, what I've tried so far:
event.preventDefault() - not working.
upvote: (e) ->
e.preventDefault()
// do stuff (ajax)
event.stopPropagation() - not working.
upvote: (e) ->
e.stopPropagation()
// do stuff (ajax)
return false - not working.
upvote: (e) ->
// do stuff (ajax)
return false
I've also tried all of the above using jQuery in my index.html, but nothing seems to work. What should I do here and what I'm doing wrong? I've checked event.type and it's click
so I guess I should be able to avoid redirect somehow?
Excuse me, I'm a rookie when it comes to React.
Thank you!
回答1:
React events are actually Synthetic Events, not Native Events. As it is written here:
Event delegation: React doesn't actually attach event handlers to the nodes themselves. When React starts up, it starts listening for all events at the top level using a single event listener. When a component is mounted or unmounted, the event handlers are simply added or removed from an internal mapping. When an event occurs, React knows how to dispatch it using this mapping. When there are no event handlers left in the mapping, React's event handlers are simple no-ops.
Try to use Use Event.stopImmediatePropagation
:
upvote: (e) ->
e.stopPropagation();
e.nativeEvent.stopImmediatePropagation();
回答2:
A full version of the solution will be wrapping the method upvotes inside onClick, passing e and use native e.preventDefault();
upvotes = (e, arg1, arg2, arg3 ) => {
e.preventDefault();
//do something...
}
render(){
return (<a type="simpleQuery" onClick={ e => this.upvotes(e, arg1, arg2, arg3) }>
upvote
</a>);
{
回答3:
try bind(this) so your code looks like below --
<a className="upvotes" onClick={this.upvote.bind(this)}>upvote</a>
or if you are writing in es6 react component in constructor you could do this
constructor(props){
super(props);
this.upvote = this.upvote.bind(this);
}
upvote(e){ // function upvote
e.preventDefault();
return false
}
回答4:
render: ->
<a className="upvotes" onClick={(e) => {this.upvote(e); }}>upvote</a>
回答5:
This is because those handlers do not preserve scope. From react documentation: react documentation
Check the "no autobinding" section. You should write the handler like: onClick = () => {}
回答6:
The Gist I found and works for me:
const DummyLink = ({onClick, children, props}) => (
<a href="#" onClick={evt => {
evt.preventDefault();
onClick && onClick();
}} {...props}>
{children}
</a>
);
Credit for srph https://gist.github.com/srph/020b5c02dd489f30bfc59138b7c39b53
回答7:
If you use checkbox
<input
type='checkbox'
onChange={this.checkboxHandler}
/>
stopPropagation and stopImmediatePropagation won't be working.
Because you must using onClick={this.checkboxHandler}
回答8:
If you are using React Router, I'd suggest looking into the react-router-bootstrap library which has a handy component LinkContainer. This component prevents default page reload so you don't have to deal with the event.
In your case it could look something like:
import { LinkContainer } from 'react-router-bootstrap';
<LinkContainer to={givePathHere}>
<span className="upvotes" onClick={this.upvote}>upvote</span>
</LinkContainer>
回答9:
I've had some troubles with anchor tags and preventDefault
in the past and I always forget what I'm doing wrong, so here's what I figured out.
The problem I often have is that I try to access the component's attributes by destructuring them directly as with other React components. This will not work, the page will reload, even with e.preventDefault()
:
function (e, { href }) {
e.preventDefault();
// Do something with href
}
...
<a href="/foobar" onClick={clickHndl}>Go to Foobar</a>
It seems the destructuring causes an error (Cannot read property 'href' of undefined
) that is not displayed to the console, probably due to the page complete reload. Since the function is in error, the preventDefault
doesn't get called. If the href is #, the error is displayed properly since there's no actual reload.
I understand now that I can only access attributes as a second handler argument on custom React components, not on native HTML tags. So of course, to access an HTML tag attribute in an event, this would be the way:
function (e) {
e.preventDefault();
const { href } = e.target;
// Do something with href
}
...
<a href="/foobar" onClick={clickHndl}>Go to Foobar</a>
I hope this helps other people like me puzzled by not shown errors!
回答10:
I didn't find any of the mentioned options to be correct or work for me when I came to this page. They did give me ideas to test things out and I found that this worked for me.
dontGoToLink(e) {
e.preventDefault();
}
render() {
return (<a href="test.com" onClick={this.dontGoToLink} />});
}
回答11:
In a context like this
function ActionLink() {
function handleClick(e) {
e.preventDefault();
console.log('The link was clicked.');
}
return (
<a href="#" onClick={handleClick}>
Click me
</a>
);
}
As you can see, you have to call preventDefault() explicitly.
I think that this docs, could be helpful.
回答12:
A nice and simple option that worked for me was:
<a href="javascript: false" onClick={this.handlerName}>Click Me</a>
回答13:
none of these methods worked for me, so I just solved this with CSS:
.upvotes:before {
content:"";
float: left;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
position: absolute;
left: 0;
top: 0;
}