When creating React components it is more convenient to always follow the same organisation for method order to help you easily find lifecycle methods, event handlers, etc.
Fixable: This rule is automatically fixable using the sort-comp
transform in react-codemod.
The default configuration ensures that the following order must be followed:
- static methods and properties
- lifecycle methods:
displayName
,propTypes
,contextTypes
,childContextTypes
,mixins
,statics
,defaultProps
,constructor
,getDefaultProps
,state
,getInitialState
,getChildContext
,getDerivedStateFromProps
,componentWillMount
,UNSAFE_componentWillMount
,componentDidMount
,componentWillReceiveProps
,UNSAFE_componentWillReceiveProps
,shouldComponentUpdate
,componentWillUpdate
,UNSAFE_componentWillUpdate
,getSnapshotBeforeUpdate
,componentDidUpdate
,componentDidCatch
,componentWillUnmount
(in this order). - custom methods
render
method
Examples of incorrect code for this rule:
var Hello = createReactClass({
render: function() {
return <div>Hello</div>;
},
displayName : 'Hello'
});
Examples of correct code for this rule:
var Hello = createReactClass({
displayName : 'Hello',
render: function() {
return <div>Hello</div>;
}
});
This rule can take one argument to customize the components organisation.
...
"react/sort-comp": [<enabled>, { order: <order>, groups: <groups> }]
...
enabled
: for enabling the rule. 0=off, 1=warn, 2=error. Defaults to 0.order
: optional array of methods to validate.groups
: optional object of methods groups.
The default configuration is:
{
order: [
'static-methods',
'lifecycle',
'everything-else',
'render'
],
groups: {
lifecycle: [
'displayName',
'propTypes',
'contextTypes',
'childContextTypes',
'mixins',
'statics',
'defaultProps',
'constructor',
'getDefaultProps',
'state',
'getInitialState',
'getChildContext',
'getDerivedStateFromProps',
'componentWillMount',
'UNSAFE_componentWillMount',
'componentDidMount',
'componentWillReceiveProps',
'UNSAFE_componentWillReceiveProps',
'shouldComponentUpdate',
'componentWillUpdate',
'UNSAFE_componentWillUpdate',
'getSnapshotBeforeUpdate',
'componentDidUpdate',
'componentDidCatch',
'componentWillUnmount'
]
}
}
static-variables
This group is not specified by default, but can be used to enforce class static variable positioning.static-methods
is a special keyword that refers to static class methods.lifecycle
refers to thelifecycle
group defined ingroups
.everything-else
is a special group that matches all of the methods that do not match any of the other groups.render
refers to therender
method.type-annotations
. This group is not specified by default, but can be used to enforce flow annotations' positioning.getters
This group is not specified by default, but can be used to enforce class getters' positioning.setters
This group is not specified by default, but can be used to enforce class setters' positioning.instance-variables
This group is not specified by default, but can be used to enforce all other instance variables' positioning.instance-methods
This group is not specified by default, but can be used to enforce all other instance methods' positioning.
You can override this configuration to match your needs.
For example, if you want to place your event handlers (onClick
, onSubmit
, etc.) before render
but the other methods after it:
"react/sort-comp": [1, {
order: [
'static-methods',
'lifecycle',
'/^on.+$/',
'render',
'everything-else'
]
}]
Examples of incorrect code for this rule, with the above configuration:
var Hello = createReactClass({
render: function() {
return <div>Hello</div>;
},
onClick: function() {}
});
Examples of correct code for this rule, with the above configuration:
var Hello = createReactClass({
onClick: function() {},
render: function() {
return <div>Hello</div>;
}
});
If you want to split your render
method into smaller ones and keep them just before render:
"react/sort-comp": [1, {
order: [
'static-methods',
'lifecycle',
'everything-else',
'rendering',
],
groups: {
rendering: [
'/^render.+$/',
'render'
]
}
}]
Examples of incorrect code for this rule, with the above configuration:
var Hello = createReactClass({
renderButton: function() {},
onClick: function() {},
render: function() {
return <div>Hello</div>;
}
});
Examples of correct code for this rule, with the above configuration:
var Hello = createReactClass({
onClick: function() {},
renderButton: function() {},
render: function() {
return <div>Hello</div>;
}
});
If you want to flow annotations to be at the top:
"react/sort-comp": [1, {
order: [
'type-annotations',
'static-methods',
'lifecycle',
'everything-else',
'render',
],
}]
Examples of incorrect code for this rule, with the above configuration:
class Hello extends React.Component<any, Props, void> {
onClick() { this._someElem = true; }
props: Props;
_someElem: bool;
render() {
return <div>Hello</div>;
}
}
Examples of correct code for this rule, with the above configuration:
type Props = {};
class Hello extends React.Component<any, Props, void> {
props: Props;
_someElem: bool;
onClick() { this._someElem = true; }
render() {
return <div>Hello</div>;
}
}
This rule is a formatting preference and not following it won't negatively affect the quality of your code. If components organisation isn't a part of your coding standards, then you can leave this rule off.