Developers will often use Flow and React together, so it is important that Flow can effectively type both common and advanced React patterns. This guide will teach you how to use Flow to create safer React applications.
In this guide we will assume you know the React basics and focus on adding types for patterns you are already familiar with. We will be using examples based on react-dom
, but all of these patterns work in other environments like react-native
as well.
Flow and Babel work well together, so it doesn’t take much to adopt Flow as a React user who already uses Babel. If you need to setup Babel with Flow, you can follow this guide.
Babel also works out of the box with Create React App, just install Flow and create a .flowconfig
.
Flow supports the @babel/plugin-transform-react-jsx
runtime options required to use JSX without explicitly importing the React namespace.
If you are using the new automatic runtime, use this configuration in your .flowconfig
so that Flow knows to auto-import jsx
:
[options] react.runtime=automatic
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Licensed under the MIT License.
https://flow.org/en/docs/react