Forms
HTML form elements work a bit differently from other DOM elements in React, because form elements naturally keep some internal state. For example, this form in plain HTML accepts a single name:
Controlled Components In HTML, form elements such as typically maintain their own state and update it based on user input. In React, mutable state is typically kept in the state property of components, and only updated with setState().
We can combine the two by making the React state be the “single source of truth”. Then the React component that renders a form also controls what happens in that form on subsequent user input. An input form element whose value is controlled by React in this way is called a “controlled component”. Handling Multiple Inputs When you need to handle multiple controlled input elements, you can add a name attribute to each element and let the handler function choose what to do based on the value .
Alternatives to Controlled Components It can sometimes be tedious to use controlled components, because you need to write an event handler for every way your data can change and pipe all of the input state through a React component. This can become particularly annoying when you are converting a preexisting codebase to React, or integrating a React application with a non-React library. In these situations, you might want to check out uncontrolled components, an alternative technique for implementing input forms.
JavaScript — The Conditional (Ternary) Operator Explained
Starting With the Basics — The if statement Using a conditional, like an if statement, allows us to specify that a certain block of code should be executed if a certain condition is met.We can nest ternary operators to test multiple conditions. For this scenario assume tickets are: $12 for the general public, $8 for students, and $6 for seniors.