@WaterlessStraw the tool you are learning today will be outdated in a year, so learn the principles behind them, learn how to write code regardless of a framework
of course, you could learn a framework and learn techniques whilst you get familiar with the framework, that's possible too
now you understand animating with the dom and in a browser, and you understand hopefully by now what animations are working and which aren't working so well
Guys, opinions please: http://stackoverflow.com/posts/684692/revisions Edits on there significantly changed an _old_ answer's contents, a few days ago... I rolled them back. The first editor rolled back my rollback with as comment:
Two-Factor authentication is practically mandatory in today’s world. The attack surface presented to malicious actors means that a short string is no longer sufficient to prove our identity. We can double down on effective authentication by centralizing it via OAuth. This decreases the attack surface, putting our precious identities in the hands of a few highly-skilled engineers instead of a…
In React, how should you reference dom elements on a page? EG, I make a couple of components via myData.map(s => <SomeComponent key={s._id} ...s />)... Now I need to find where they are on the page. What do?
Outside of the current component? Store it somewhere outside using the ref ^
that's where some sort of flux implementation would come in handy, you basically need something that the other components outside of the current tree are aware of
if your tree isn't too deep you could do something like this.props.getComponent, and pass that up
but that is pretty messy
you can also call methods directly, like have a method called getElement, that just returns this.refs.yourthing
and call that directly. element = Component.getElement()
@corvid you don't control when the component gets mounted; a HOC that adds the component to the tree can use the ref string or callback to get the DOM node of the component
*Prods @MadaraUchiha (Blame @ssube for the ping)* Interested in having a look at someone applying a dubious edit to a 2k upvoted answer, then rolling back my rollback of said edit, followed by an ad-hominem comment? (Link)