Hello World
Hello World
The smallest React example looks like this:
ReactDOM.render(
<h1>Hello, world!</h1>,
document.getElementById('root')
);It displays a heading saying āHello, world!ā on the page.
Click the link above to open an online editor. Feel free to make some changes, and see how they affect the output. Most pages in this guide will have editable examples like this one.
How to Read This Guide
In this guide, we will examine the building blocks of React apps: elements and components. Once you master them, you can create complex apps from small reusable pieces.
Tip
This guide is designed for people who prefer learning concepts step by step. If you prefer to learn by doing, check out our practical tutorial. You might find this guide and the tutorial complementary to each other.
This is the first chapter in a step-by-step guide about main React concepts. You can find a list of all its chapters in the navigation sidebar. If youāre reading this from a mobile device, you can access the navigation by pressing the button in the bottom right corner of your screen.
Every chapter in this guide builds on the knowledge introduced in earlier chapters. You can learn most of React by reading the āMain Conceptsā guide chapters in the order they appear in the sidebar. For example, āIntroducing JSXā is the next chapter after this one.
Knowledge Level Assumptions
React is a JavaScript library, and so weāll assume you have a basic understanding of the JavaScript language. If you donāt feel very confident, we recommend going through a JavaScript tutorial to check your knowledge level and enable you to follow along this guide without getting lost. It might take you between 30 minutes and an hour, but as a result you wonāt have to feel like youāre learning both React and JavaScript at the same time.
Note
This guide occasionally uses some of the newer JavaScript syntax in the examples. If you havenāt worked with JavaScript in the last few years, these three points should get you most of the way.
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