Our HelloWorld component will look like this:

  1. import React from 'react';
  2.  
  3. function HelloWorld(props){
  4. //function must return something
  5. return (
  6. //return should tell React to render Hello World in the browser
  7. );
  8. }

Now the question is what do we return from this function.

The return of this function is telling React what the DOM should look like when this component is rendered on the browser. In case you're using React.Component approach (instead of function approach like above), it's what you return from render function that tells React what the DOM should look like when the component is rendered.

In our case let's say we want to render a div element that has Hello World text like <div>Hello World</div>

One way to tell React to display the above HTML is by using React.createElement function:

  1. return React.createElement('div', null, 'Hello World');

You should try this for yourself. Open the exercise file and edit the function to return a React element like above. Once you make the changes, save the file and you will see left panel updated with what React has rendered.

Notice that React.createElement is a simple javascript function which takes three arguments. First argument is the element you want to render. In our case its a div element. Second argument is any properties we want to pass to that element. In our case we are not passing anything so it's null. Third argument is the children for this component. In this case it's the text we want to display - Hello World. So with this we are telling React to render a div element like this:

  1. <div>
  2. Hello World
  3. </div>

Congratulations, you have created your first Hello World React component.

Now your inquisitive mind is probably asking - how in the world React renders this thing on the browser?

Rendering

Let's step back from React for a moment and think about how we can create the similar Hello World div using pure Javascript. Yes pure Javascript - without any frameworks.

Good Ol' Days

Let's imagine you have a barebone html file that looks like below. It has a div with id root inside body. Pretty simple.

  1. <html>
  2. <head></head>
  3. <body>
  4. <div id="root"></div>
  5. </body>
  6. </html>

Now imagine inside the div with id root we want to render another div that says Hello World. The only catch is we want to do that programmatically using pure Javascript.To achieve this we can probably do something like this:

  1. //Create a div node and append Hello World text
  2. const helloWorldDiv = document.createElement('div');
  3. helloWorldDiv.append('Hello World');
  4.  
  5. //Select the root node and append the div created above
  6. const root = document.getElementById('root');
  7. root.appendChild(helloWorldDiv);

Here we are creating a div node with Hello World text and appending that div as a child of root div.

We can actually write our entire application this way - creating elements, removing elements, appending elements etc ourselves. As a matter of fact we did write applications this way before all these UI frameworks/libraries started to mushroom.

Age of React

Simple example like above are not that hard to write with pure Javascript but once your application gets bigger, it gets messier. That's where libraries like React come to rescue - they hide away from us the messier part of rendering on the browser.

Core React library itself doesn't really know how to render anything on the browser. The reason being core React library is designed to work on browser as well as native applications. Thus the job of rendering your component on the browser is done by another library provided by React team called ReactDOM.

Now let's get back to the HelloWorld React component we created at the top of this page and see how we can use ReactDOM to render that component to the browser.

  1. ReactDOM.render(HelloWorld, document.getElementById('root'))

Here we are calling a function called render on ReactDOM object. The first argument of the function is the component you want to render - in our case HelloWorld. Second argument is a document selector. ReactDOM appends the component we want to display (first argument) as a child of the node returned by the selector (second argument).

Compare this solution to the pure Javascript solution we looked at earlier. With pure Javascript we were doing the DOM manipulation ourselves - creating the div, appending the text and appending the newly created div to the div with id root as it's child. But with React we are not doing any DOM manipulation ourselves. Basically we are saying to React -

Hey React I have a component I want to render. I will tell you what the component should look like when it's rendered (remember this is what the return of the Component function tells). I will also tell you where to render this component (second argument we passed to ReactDOM.render function). But I don't want to get involved in DOM manipulation - I will let you do all the DOM manipulation yourself. You can call all these DOM api like document.createElement, .append, .appendChild etc. whenever you wish - I trust you and I don't care as long as I see on the browser what I expected to see.

Ok then how does React do it internally? We won't go into all the details of it but briefly talk about one important part of React implementation called Virtual DOM.

Virtual DOM

DOM (Document Object Model) is an object representation of the HTML. To see what it looks like open chrome dev tools (Right Click + Inspect) and type console.dir(document) and hit enter, you will see a JSON-like tree structure with fields and methods. React for it's part maintains a copy of this DOM - what's called a virtual DOM, named so because it's not a real one, it's a virtual copy.

Why does React hold a copy of the DOM? The main reason it maintains a virtual copy of the DOM is to improve performance of the application.Web applications these days are very complex. User interacts with the app or the app fetches data and based on that the DOM is updated so that users sees the effects of their interaction or new data. This updating of DOM, however, is an expensive operation - creating and removing DOM nodes (like we did with document.createElement('div') above) are expensive. So React optimizes this updating operations using virtual DOM.

The way this roughly works is: when there's anything that will cause a UI to update (called re-render), React first updates it's virtual DOM instead of real DOM. Then it compares the virtual DOMs (before and after the update). It has heuristic algorithm to determine which piece of the DOM might have changed. Once it figures that out, it updates only the changed piece on the real DOM. Again the reason it does this is because updating the DOM is expensive operation and it wants to optimize this piece so it only updates what is absolutely necessary instead of tearing down the entire DOM and recreating it.