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  1. ReactJS: Designing an App
  2. React JS App: events
  • ReactJS

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On this page

  • 1 Overview
  • 2 Adding event handlers
  • 3 Passing event handlers as props
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  1. ReactJS: Designing an App
  2. React JS App: events

React JS App: events

ReactJS events

reactjs
events
description
Author

albertprofe

Published

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

Modified

Sunday, August 10, 2025

1 Overview

📘 events React lets you add event handlers to your JSX.

Event handlers are your own functions that will be triggered in response to interactions like clicking, hovering, focusing form inputs, and so on.


2 Adding event handlers

You can make it show a message when a user clicks by following these three steps:

  1. Declare a function called handleClick inside your Button component.
  2. Implement the logic inside that function (use alert to show the message).
  3. Add onClick={handleClick} to the <button> JSX.

Event handler functions are usually defined inside your components

app.jsx
export default function Button() {
  function handleClick() {
    alert('You clicked me!');
  }

  return (
    <button onClick={handleClick}>
      Click me
    </button>
  );
}

By convention, it is common to name event handlers as handle followed by the event name. You’ll often see onClick={handleClick}, onMouseEnter={handleMouseEnter}, and so on.

By convention, it is common to name event handlers as handle followed by the event name. You’ll often see onClick={handleClick}, onMouseEnter={handleMouseEnter}, and so on.

Alert

Alert

You defined the handleClick function and then passed it as a prop to <button>. handleClick is an event handler

Important

Functions passed to event handlers must be passed, not called. For example:

  • passing a function (correct): <button onClick={handleClick}>
  • calling a function (incorrect): <button onClick={handleClick()}>

The difference is subtle. In the first example, the handleClick function is passed as an onClick event handler. This tells React to remember it and only call your function when the user clicks the button.

In the second example, the () at the end of handleClick() fires the function immediately during rendering, without any clicks. This is because JavaScript inside the JSX { and } executes right away.

3 Passing event handlers as props

Often you’ll want the parent component to specify a child’s event handler. Consider buttons: depending on where you’re using a Button component, you might want to execute a different function—perhaps one plays a movie and another uploads an image.

To do this, pass a prop the component receives from its parent as the event handler like so:

index.js
function Button({ onClick, children }) {
  return (
    <button onClick={onClick}>
      {children}
    </button>
  );
}

function PlayButton({ movieName }) {
  function handlePlayClick() {
    alert(`Playing ${movieName}!`);
  }

  return (
    <Button onClick={handlePlayClick}>
      Play "{movieName}"
    </Button>
  );
}

function UploadButton() {
  return (
    <Button onClick={() => alert('Uploading!')}>
      Upload Image
    </Button>
  );
}

export default function Toolbar() {
  return (
    <div>
      <PlayButton movieName="Kiki's Delivery Service" />
      <UploadButton />
    </div>
  );
}

Executing index.js:

Executing index.js:

First, Toolbar component renders PlayButton and UploadButton components. Second, both of them call their functions and then, each one call Button to render the button

First, Toolbar component renders PlayButton and UploadButton components. Second, both of them call their functions and then, each one call Button to render the button

Here, the Toolbar component renders a PlayButton and an UploadButton:

  • PlayButton passes handlePlayClick as the onClick prop to the Button inside.
  • UploadButton passes() => alert('Uploading!') as the onClick prop to the Button inside.

Finally, your Button component accepts a prop called onClick. It passes that prop directly to the built-in browser <button> with onClick={onClick}. This tells React to call the passed function on click.

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React JS App: async
React JS App: router

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