Is there a way to incorporate React's curly brace notation and an href tag? Say we have the following value in the state:
{this.state.id}and the following HTML attributes on a tag:
href="#demo1"Is there a way I can add the id state to the HTML attribute to get something like this:
href={"#demo + {this.state.id}"}Which will yield:
#demo1 0 5 Answers
You're almost correct, just misplaced a few quotes. Wrapping the whole thing in regular quotes will literally give you the string #demo + {this.state.id} - you need to indicate which are variables and which are string literals. Since anything inside {} is an inline JSX expression, you can do:
href={"#demo" + this.state.id}This will use the string literal #demo and concatenate it to the value of this.state.id. This can then be applied to all strings. Consider this:
var text = "world";And this:
{"Hello " + text + " Andrew"}This will yield:
Hello world Andrew You can also use ES6 string interpolation/template literals with ` (backticks) and ${expr} (interpolated expression), which is closer to what you seem to be trying to do:
href={`#demo${this.state.id}`}This will basically substitute the value of this.state.id, concatenating it to #demo. It is equivalent to doing: "#demo" + this.state.id.
the best way to concat props/variables:
var sample = "test";
var result = `this is just a ${sample}`;
//this is just a test If u want to do it in JSX
<button className={`tab__btn first ${props.state}`} > {props.text}
</button> you can simply do this..
<img src={"" + this.props.url +"/1.jpg"}/> for Concatenating variables and strings in React with map , for exmple :
{listOfCategories.map((Categories, key) => { return ( <a href={`#${Categories.designation}`} className="cat-link" key={key}> </div> </a> ); })}