Importing and Exporting Components
The magic of components lies in their reusability: you can create components that are composed of other components. But as you nest more and more components, it often makes sense to start splitting them into different files. This lets you keep your files easy to scan and reuse components in more places.
நீங்கள் கற்றுக்கொள்ள போவது
- What a root component file is
- How to import and export a component
- When to use default and named imports and exports
- How to import and export multiple components from one file
- How to split components into multiple files
The root component file
In Your First Component, you made a Profile
component and a Gallery
component that renders it:
function Profile() { return ( <img src="https://i.imgur.com/MK3eW3As.jpg" alt="Katherine Johnson" /> ); } export default function Gallery() { return ( <section> <h1>Amazing scientists</h1> <Profile /> <Profile /> <Profile /> </section> ); }
These currently live in a root component file, named App.js
in this example. Depending on your setup, your root component could be in another file, though. If you use a framework with file-based routing, such as Next.js, your root component will be different for every page.
Exporting and importing a component
What if you want to change the landing screen in the future and put a list of science books there? Or place all the profiles somewhere else? It makes sense to move Gallery
and Profile
out of the root component file. This will make them more modular and reusable in other files. You can move a component in three steps:
- Make a new JS file to put the components in.
- Export your function component from that file (using either default or named exports).
- Import it in the file where you’ll use the component (using the corresponding technique for importing default or named exports).
Here both Profile
and Gallery
have been moved out of App.js
into a new file called Gallery.js
. Now you can change App.js
to import Gallery
from Gallery.js
:
import Gallery from './Gallery.js'; export default function App() { return ( <Gallery /> ); }
Notice how this example is broken down into two component files now:
Gallery.js
:- Defines the
Profile
component which is only used within the same file and is not exported. - Exports the
Gallery
component as a default export.
- Defines the
App.js
:- Imports
Gallery
as a default import fromGallery.js
. - Exports the root
App
component as a default export.
- Imports
Deep Dive
There are two primary ways to export values with JavaScript: default exports and named exports. So far, our examples have only used default exports. But you can use one or both of them in the same file. A file can have no more than one default export, but it can have as many named exports as you like.
How you export your component dictates how you must import it. You will get an error if you try to import a default export the same way you would a named export! This chart can help you keep track:
Syntax | Export statement | Import statement |
---|---|---|
Default | export default function Button() {} | import Button from './Button.js'; |
Named | export function Button() {} | import { Button } from './Button.js'; |
When you write a default import, you can put any name you want after import
. For example, you could write import Banana from './Button.js'
instead and it would still provide you with the same default export. In contrast, with named imports, the name has to match on both sides. That’s why they are called named imports!
People often use default exports if the file exports only one component, and use named exports if it exports multiple components and values. Regardless of which coding style you prefer, always give meaningful names to your component functions and the files that contain them. Components without names, like export default () => {}
, are discouraged because they make debugging harder.
Exporting and importing multiple components from the same file
What if you want to show just one Profile
instead of a gallery? You can export the Profile
component, too. But Gallery.js
already has a default export, and you can’t have two default exports. You could create a new file with a default export, or you could add a named export for Profile
. A file can only have one default export, but it can have numerous named exports!
First, export Profile
from Gallery.js
using a named export (no default
keyword):
export function Profile() {
// ...
}
Then, import Profile
from Gallery.js
to App.js
using a named import (with the curly braces):
import { Profile } from './Gallery.js';
Finally, render <Profile />
from the App
component:
export default function App() {
return <Profile />;
}
Now Gallery.js
contains two exports: a default Gallery
export, and a named Profile
export. App.js
imports both of them. Try editing <Profile />
to <Gallery />
and back in this example:
import Gallery from './Gallery.js'; import { Profile } from './Gallery.js'; export default function App() { return ( <Profile /> ); }
Now you’re using a mix of default and named exports:
Gallery.js
:- Exports the
Profile
component as a named export calledProfile
. - Exports the
Gallery
component as a default export.
- Exports the
App.js
:- Imports
Profile
as a named import calledProfile
fromGallery.js
. - Imports
Gallery
as a default import fromGallery.js
. - Exports the root
App
component as a default export.
- Imports
Recap
On this page you learned:
- What a root component file is
- How to import and export a component
- When and how to use default and named imports and exports
- How to export multiple components from the same file
Challenge 1 of 1: Split the components further
Currently, Gallery.js
exports both Profile
and Gallery
, which is a bit confusing.
Move the Profile
component to its own Profile.js
, and then change the App
component to render both <Profile />
and <Gallery />
one after another.
You may use either a default or a named export for Profile
, but make sure that you use the corresponding import syntax in both App.js
and Gallery.js
! You can refer to the table from the deep dive above:
Syntax | Export statement | Import statement |
---|---|---|
Default | export default function Button() {} | import Button from './Button.js'; |
Named | export function Button() {} | import { Button } from './Button.js'; |
// Move me to Profile.js! export function Profile() { return ( <img src="https://i.imgur.com/QIrZWGIs.jpg" alt="Alan L. Hart" /> ); } export default function Gallery() { return ( <section> <h1>Amazing scientists</h1> <Profile /> <Profile /> <Profile /> </section> ); }
After you get it working with one kind of exports, make it work with the other kind.