Form components such as <input>
, <textarea>
, and <option>
differ from other native components because they can be mutated via user interactions. These components provide interfaces that make it easier to manage forms in response to user interactions.
For information on events on <form>
see Form Events.
Form components support a few props that are affected via user interactions:
value
, supported by <input>
and <textarea>
components.checked
, supported by <input>
components of type checkbox
or radio
.selected
, supported by <option>
components.In HTML, the value of <textarea>
is set via children. In React, you should use value
instead.
Form components allow listening for changes by setting a callback to the onChange
prop. The onChange
prop works across browsers to fire in response to user interactions when:
value
of <input>
or <textarea>
changes.checked
state of <input>
changes.selected
state of <option>
changes.Like all DOM events, the onChange
prop is supported on all native components and can be used to listen to bubbled change events.
Note:
For
<input>
and<textarea>
,onChange
supersedes — and should generally be used instead of — the DOM's built-inoninput
event handler.
An <input>
with value
set is a controlled component. In a controlled <input>
, the value of the rendered element will always reflect the value
prop. For example:
render: function() {
return <input type="text" value="Hello!" />;
}
This will render an input that always has a value of Hello!
. Any user input will have no effect on the rendered element because React has declared the value to be Hello!
. If you wanted to update the value in response to user input, you could use the onChange
event:
getInitialState: function() {
return {value: 'Hello!'};
},
handleChange: function(event) {
this.setState({value: event.target.value});
},
render: function() {
var value = this.state.value;
return <input type="text" value={value} onChange={this.handleChange} />;
}
In this example, we are simply accepting the newest value provided by the user and updating the value
prop of the <input>
component. This pattern makes it easy to implement interfaces that respond to or validate user interactions. For example:
handleChange: function(event) {
this.setState({value: event.target.value.substr(0, 140)});
}
This would accept user input but truncate the value to the first 140 characters.
Be aware that, in an attempt to normalize change handling for checkbox and radio inputs, React uses a click
event in place of a change
event. For the most part this behaves as expected, except when calling preventDefault
in a change
handler. preventDefault
stops the browser from visually updating the input, even if checked
gets toggled. This can be worked around either by removing the call to preventDefault
, or putting the toggle of checked
in a setTimeout
.
An <input>
that does not supply a value
(or sets it to null
) is an uncontrolled component. In an uncontrolled <input>
, the value of the rendered element will reflect the user's input. For example:
render: function() {
return <input type="text" />;
}
This will render an input that starts off with an empty value. Any user input will be immediately reflected by the rendered element. If you wanted to listen to updates to the value, you could use the onChange
event just like you can with controlled components.
If you want to initialize the component with a non-empty value, you can supply a defaultValue
prop. For example:
render: function() {
return <input type="text" defaultValue="Hello!" />;
}
This example will function much like the Uncontrolled Components example above.
Likewise, <input>
supports defaultChecked
and <select>
supports defaultValue
.
Note:
The
defaultValue
anddefaultChecked
props are only used during initial render. If you need to update the value in a subsequent render, you will need to use a controlled component.
Using form components such as <input>
in React presents a challenge that is absent when writing traditional form HTML. For example, in HTML:
<input type="text" name="title" value="Untitled" />
This renders an input initialized with the value, Untitled
. When the user updates the input, the node's value
property will change. However, node.getAttribute('value')
will still return the value used at initialization time, Untitled
.
Unlike HTML, React components must represent the state of the view at any point in time and not only at initialization time. For example, in React:
render: function() {
return <input type="text" name="title" value="Untitled" />;
}
Since this method describes the view at any point in time, the value of the text input should always be Untitled
.
In HTML, the value of <textarea>
is usually set using its children:
<!-- antipattern: DO NOT DO THIS! -->
<textarea name="description">This is the description.</textarea>
For HTML, this easily allows developers to supply multiline values. However, since React is JavaScript, we do not have string limitations and can use \n
if we want newlines. In a world where we have value
and defaultValue
, it is ambiguous what role children play. For this reason, you should not use children when setting <textarea>
values:
<textarea name="description" value="This is a description." />
If you do decide to use children, they will behave like defaultValue
.
The selected <option>
in an HTML <select>
is normally specified through that option's selected
attribute. In React, in order to make components easier to manipulate, the following format is adopted instead:
<select value="B">
<option value="A">Apple</option>
<option value="B">Banana</option>
<option value="C">Cranberry</option>
</select>
To make an uncontrolled component, defaultValue
is used instead.
Note:
You can pass an array into the
value
attribute, allowing you to select multiple options in aselect
tag:<select multiple={true} value={['B', 'C']}>
.