💡 What is Event Parameter in React? When an event happens in React, React automatically passes an event object to the function. This event object gives details like: 👉 Which element triggered the event 👉 Input value 👉 Mouse position 👉 Prevent default behavior 📌 Example Uses: • Reading input values • Preventing form reload • Handling button clicks • Managing UI interactions ⚡ Event parameter helps you control user interactions precisely. Master this to write professional React logic. Follow TFSC for practical frontend learning. #reactjs #reactevents #javascript #frontenddevelopment #webdevelopment #coding #learnreact #programming #tfsc
More Relevant Posts
-
Instead of creating separate state for every input… You can manage all inputs using one state object. 👉 Use one state → store all form fields 👉 Use name attribute → identify input 👉 Update dynamically using onChange 📌 Example fields: • name • email • password 📌 How it works: 1️⃣ Create one state object 2️⃣ Add name to inputs 3️⃣ Use one onChange handler 4️⃣ Update using [name]: value ⚡ This makes your form: ✔ Cleaner ✔ Scalable ✔ Easy to manage Master this to build real-world forms in React. Follow TFSC for practical frontend learning. #reactjs #reactforms #frontenddevelopment #javascript #webdevelopment #coding #learnreact #programming #tfsc
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Promises vs. Async/Await in JavaScript: The Complete Guide A comprehensive guide exploring JavaScript's fundamental asynchronous patterns: Promises and Async/Await. Learn their mechanisms, compare their strengths, and understand when to leverage each for cleaner, more efficient asynchronous code in your web applications. Read the full article 👇 https://lnkd.in/g9P5pxGU #JavaScript #WebDevelopment #Programming #SoftwareEngineering #Tech #Promises #AsyncAwait #AsynchronousProgramming #JSAsync #FrontendDevelopment #DigitalTransformation #FutureOfWork
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
-
🔄 JavaScript Async Evolution Callbacks → Promises → Async/Await Here's what changed and why it matters: Callbacks — the OG way. Works, but nests into chaos fast. "Callback Hell" is real. Promises — cleaner chaining with .then() and .catch(). Big improvement, still a bit verbose. Async/Await — reads like normal code. try/catch for errors. Clean, simple, everyone loves it. ✅ Remember: Async/Await is just Promises under the hood. Learn both. Still working in a Callbacks codebase? Drop a comment 👇 #JavaScript #WebDev #AsyncJS #Programming #100DaysOfCode
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
-
🚀 React Series – Day 8 Rendering Lists Efficiently in React Displaying lists of data is a common requirement - whether it’s users, products, or messages. In React, lists are usually rendered using the map() function. Each item in the list should have a unique key. This helps React identify which items have changed, been added, or removed. Using proper keys improves performance and prevents unexpected UI issues. 👉 A good practice is to use a unique ID instead of the array index whenever possible. #reactjs #javascript #frontenddeveloper #webdevelopment #codinginterview #learnreact #30daysofcode #programming #reactinterview #react #coding
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
💡 Conditional Rendering using && in React In React, you can show something only if a condition is true using &&. 👉 Syntax: condition && <Component /> 📌 How it works: • If condition is true → element renders • If condition is false → nothing renders 📌 Example Use Cases: • Show error messages • Display notifications • Toggle UI elements • Conditional sections 📌 Why use &&? • Cleaner than ternary (for single condition) • No need for else case • Easy to read ⚡ Perfect for simple conditional UI rendering. Follow TFSC for practical React learning. #reactjs #conditionalrendering #frontenddevelopment #javascript #webdevelopment #coding #learnreact #programming #tfsc
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Async JavaScript is easier to understand when you stop thinking about “parallel code.” JavaScript still runs on a single main thread. What makes it feel non-blocking is the event loop, callback queue, and browser/runtime APIs working together. That is why setTimeout, fetch, and promises do not pause everything else. The big idea: async code gets scheduled first, then runs when the stack is ready. This infographic breaks that flow into the exact pieces that matter. Which JavaScript topic should I simplify next? #JavaScript #AsyncJavaScript #EventLoop #WebDevelopment #FrontendDevelopment #Programming #Promises #AsyncAwait
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
-
Most JavaScript problems aren’t about complexity. They’re about fundamentals. Common mistakes I still see: Using == instead of === Not understanding scope Poor async handling Callback hell Fixing these will improve your code quality instantly. Master the basics → everything else becomes easier. Which one did you struggle with the most? #webdevelopment #javascript #softwareengineering #coding #developer #frontend #cleancode #programming #techcareer
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
-
Most JavaScript problems aren’t about complexity. They’re about fundamentals. Common mistakes I still see: Using == instead of === Not understanding scope Poor async handling Callback hell Fixing these will improve your code quality instantly. Master the basics → everything else becomes easier. Which one did you struggle with the most? #webdevelopment #javascript #softwareengineering #coding #developer #frontend #cleancode #programming #techcareer
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
-
JavaScript is single threaded, but handles async operations so smoothly 👇 That’s where the Event Loop comes in. At first, things seem simple: • Code runs line by line But then you see behavior like this: Even with 0ms, the timeout doesn’t run immediately. Because JavaScript uses: ✔ Call Stack ✔ Web APIs ✔ Callback Queue ✔ Event Loop Understanding this changed how I think about async code and debugging. Sometimes the delay isn’t about time, it’s about how the event loop schedules execution. #JavaScript #EventLoop #AsyncJavaScript #FrontendDevelopment #Programming
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
-
Async JavaScript used to feel messy… First callbacks → then promises → still confusing 😅 But then came async/await — and suddenly everything started making sense. 1. Cleaner code 2. Better readability 3. Easier error handling In this blog, I’ve broken it down in a simple and beginner-friendly way with examples and visuals. If async still confuses you, this might help https://lnkd.in/gXYD7Qbg Would love your feedback 🙌 #javascript #webdevelopment #frontend #programming #100DaysOfCode
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Explore content categories
- Career
- Productivity
- Finance
- Soft Skills & Emotional Intelligence
- Project Management
- Education
- Technology
- Leadership
- Ecommerce
- User Experience
- Recruitment & HR
- Customer Experience
- Real Estate
- Marketing
- Sales
- Retail & Merchandising
- Science
- Supply Chain Management
- Future Of Work
- Consulting
- Writing
- Economics
- Artificial Intelligence
- Employee Experience
- Workplace Trends
- Fundraising
- Networking
- Corporate Social Responsibility
- Negotiation
- Communication
- Engineering
- Hospitality & Tourism
- Business Strategy
- Change Management
- Organizational Culture
- Design
- Innovation
- Event Planning
- Training & Development