I am currently migrating a React application to TypeScript. So far, this works pretty well, but I have a problem with the return types of my render
functions, specifically in my functional components.
I have always used JSX.Element
as the return type, now this doesn't work any more if a component decides to not render anything, i.e. returns null
, since null
is not a valid value for JSX.Element
. This was the beginning of my journey. I searched the web and found that you should use ReactNode
instead, which includes null
and a few other things that can happen.
However, when creating a functional component, TypeScript complains about the ReactNode
type. Again, after some searching I found, that for functional components you should use ReactElement
instead. However, if I do so, the compatibility issue is gone, but now TypeScript again complains about null
not being a valid value.
To cut a long story short, I have three questions:
What is the difference between JSX.Element, ReactNode and ReactElement? Why do the render methods of class components return ReactNode, but functional components return ReactElement? How do I solve this with respect to null?
class Example extends Component<ExampleProps> {
for classes, and const Example: FunctionComponent<ExampleProps> = (props) => {
for function components (where ExampleProps
is an interface for the expected props). And then these types have enough information that the return type can be inferred.
What is the difference between JSX.Element, ReactNode and ReactElement?
A ReactElement is an object with a type and props.
type Key = string | number
interface ReactElement<P = any, T extends string | JSXElementConstructor<any> = string | JSXElementConstructor<any>> {
type: T;
props: P;
key: Key | null;
}
A ReactNode is a ReactElement, a ReactFragment, a string, a number or an array of ReactNodes, or null, or undefined, or a boolean:
type ReactText = string | number;
type ReactChild = ReactElement | ReactText;
interface ReactNodeArray extends Array<ReactNode> {}
type ReactFragment = {} | ReactNodeArray;
type ReactNode = ReactChild | ReactFragment | ReactPortal | boolean | null | undefined;
JSX.Element is a ReactElement, with the generic type for props and type being any. It exists, as various libraries can implement JSX in their own way, therefore JSX is a global namespace that then gets set by the library, React sets it like this:
declare global {
namespace JSX {
interface Element extends React.ReactElement<any, any> { }
}
}
By example:
<p> // <- ReactElement = JSX.Element
<Custom> // <- ReactElement = JSX.Element
{true && "test"} // <- ReactNode
</Custom>
</p>
Why do the render methods of class components return ReactNode, but function components return ReactElement?
Indeed, they do return different things. Component
s return:
render(): ReactNode;
And functions are "stateless components":
interface StatelessComponent<P = {}> {
(props: P & { children?: ReactNode }, context?: any): ReactElement | null;
// ... doesn't matter
}
This is actually due to historical reasons.
How do I solve this with respect to null?
Type it as ReactElement | null
just as react does. Or let Typescript infer the type.
1.) What is the difference between JSX.Element, ReactNode and ReactElement?
ReactElement and JSX.Element are the result of invoking React.createElement
directly or via JSX transpilation. It is an object with type
, props
and key
. JSX.Element
is ReactElement
, whose props
and type
have type any
, so they are more or less the same.
const jsx = <div>hello</div>
const ele = React.createElement("div", null, "hello");
ReactNode is used as return type for render()
in class components. It also is the default type for children
attribute with PropsWithChildren
.
const Comp: FunctionComponent = props => <div>{props.children}</div>
// children?: React.ReactNode
It looks more complicated in the React type declarations, but is equivalent to:
type ReactNode = {} | null | undefined;
// super type `{}` has absorbed *all* other types, which are sub types of `{}`
// so it is a very "broad" type (I don't want to say useless...)
You can assign almost everything to ReactNode
. I usually would prefer stronger types, but there might be some valid cases to use it.
2.) Why do the render methods of class components return ReactNode, but function components return ReactElement?
tl;dr: It is a current TS type incompatibility not related to core React.
TS class component: returns ReactNode with render(), more permissive than React/JS
TS function component: returns JSX.Element | null, more restrictive than React/JS
In principle, render()
in React/JS class components supports the same return types as a function component. With regard to TS, the different types are a type inconsistency still kept due to historical reasons and the need for backwards-compatibility.
Ideally a valid return type would probably look more like this:
type ComponentReturnType = ReactElement | Array<ComponentReturnType> | string | number
| boolean | null // Note: undefined is invalid
3.) How do I solve this with respect to null?
// Use type inference; inferred return type is `JSX.Element | null`
const MyComp1 = ({ condition }: { condition: boolean }) =>
condition ? <div>Hello</div> : null
// Use explicit function return types; Add `null`, if needed
const MyComp2 = (): JSX.Element => <div>Hello</div>;
const MyComp3 = (): React.ReactElement => <div>Hello</div>;
// Option 3 is equivalent to 2 + we don't need to use a global (JSX namespace)
// Use built-in `FunctionComponent` or `FC` type
const MyComp4: React.FC<MyProps> = () => <div>Hello</div>;
Note: Avoiding React.FC
won't save you from the JSX.Element | null
return type restriction.
Create React App recently dropped React.FC
from its template, as it has some quirks like an implicit {children?: ReactNode}
type definition. So using React.FC
sparingly might be preferable.
const MyCompFragment: FunctionComponent = () => <>"Hello"</>
const MyCompCast: FunctionComponent = () => "Hello" as any
// alternative to `as any`: `as unknown as JSX.Element | null`
ReactFragment
is Iterable<ReactNode>
now, there is no type {}
anymore.
ReactElement is the type for elements in React, either created via JSX or React.createElement.
const a = <div/> // this is a ReactElement
ReactNode is wider, it can be text, number, boolean, null, undefined, a portal, a ReactElement, or an array of ReactNodes. It represents anything that React can render.
const a = (
<div>
hello {[1, "world", true]} // this is a ReactNode
</div>
)
JSX.Element
is an internal hook for Typescript. It is set equal to ReactElement to tell Typescript that every JSX expressions should be typed as ReactElements. But if we'd use Preact, or other technologies using JSX it would be set to something else.
Functional components return ReactElement | null
, so it cannot return a bare string or an array of ReactElements. It is a known limitation. The workaround is to use Fragments :
const Foo: FC = () => {
return <>hello world!</> // this works
}
Class components' render function return ReactNode
, so there shouldn't be any problem.
https://github.com/typescript-cheatsheets/react#useful-react-prop-type-examples
export declare interface AppProps {
children1: JSX.Element; // bad, doesnt account for arrays
children2: JSX.Element | JSX.Element[]; // meh, doesn't accept strings
children3: React.ReactChildren; // despite the name, not at all an appropriate type; it is a utility
children4: React.ReactChild[]; // better, accepts array children
children: React.ReactNode; // best, accepts everything (see edge case below)
functionChildren: (name: string) => React.ReactNode; // recommended function as a child render prop type
style?: React.CSSProperties; // to pass through style props
onChange?: React.FormEventHandler<HTMLInputElement>; // form events! the generic parameter is the type of event.target
// more info: https://react-typescript-cheatsheet.netlify.app/docs/advanced/patterns_by_usecase/#wrappingmirroring
props: Props & React.ComponentPropsWithoutRef<"button">; // to impersonate all the props of a button element and explicitly not forwarding its ref
props2: Props & React.ComponentPropsWithRef<MyButtonWithForwardRef>; // to impersonate all the props of MyButtonForwardedRef and explicitly forwarding its ref
}
Success story sharing
ReactComponent
should beReact.Component
orComponent
.