A common pattern in React is for a component to return multiple elements. Fragments let you group a list of children without adding extra nodes to the DOM.
render() { return ( <React.Fragment> <ChildA /> <ChildB /> <ChildC /> </React.Fragment> ); }
There is also a new short syntax for declaring them.
A common pattern is for a component to return a list of children. Take this example React snippet:
class Table extends React.Component { render() { return ( <table> <tr> <Columns /> </tr> </table> ); } }
<Columns />
would need to return multiple <td>
elements in order for the rendered HTML to be valid. If a parent div was used inside the render()
of <Columns />
, then the resulting HTML will be invalid.
class Columns extends React.Component { render() { return ( <div> <td>Hello</td> <td>World</td> </div> ); } }
results in a <Table />
output of:
<table> <tr> <div> <td>Hello</td> <td>World</td> </div> </tr> </table>
Fragments solve this problem.
class Columns extends React.Component { render() { return ( <React.Fragment> <td>Hello</td> <td>World</td> </React.Fragment> ); } }
which results in a correct <Table />
output of:
<table> <tr> <td>Hello</td> <td>World</td> </tr> </table>
There is a new, shorter syntax you can use for declaring fragments. It looks like empty tags:
class Columns extends React.Component { render() { return ( <> <td>Hello</td> <td>World</td> </> ); } }
You can use <></>
the same way you’d use any other element except that it doesn’t support keys or attributes.
Fragments declared with the explicit <React.Fragment>
syntax may have keys. A use case for this is mapping a collection to an array of fragments — for example, to create a description list:
function Glossary(props) { return ( <dl> {props.items.map(item => ( // Without the `key`, React will fire a key warning <React.Fragment key={item.id}> <dt>{item.term}</dt> <dd>{item.description}</dd> </React.Fragment> ))} </dl> ); }
key
is the only attribute that can be passed to Fragment
. In the future, we may add support for additional attributes, such as event handlers.
You can try out the new JSX fragment syntax with this CodePen.
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https://reactjs.org/docs/fragments.html