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Possible Plagiarism

Plagiarized on 2020-12-28
by Mrigank Shekhar Shringi

Original Post

Original - Posted on 2015-06-25
by T.J. Crowder



            
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I've Tried this code on your snippet and it is working good -
<!-- begin snippet: js hide: false console: true babel: true -->
<!-- language: lang-js -->
import React from "react"; import ReactDOM from "react-dom"; import "antd/dist/antd.css"; import "./index.css"; import { Table } from "antd";
const data = [ { key: "1", name: "John Brown", age: 32, address: "New York No. 1 Lake Park" }, { key: "2", name: "Carl Green", age: 42, address: "London No. 1 Lake Park" }, { key: "3", name: "Joe Black", age: 32, address: "Sidney No. 1 Lake Park" }, { key: "4", name: "Jim Red", age: 32, address: "London No. 2 Lake Park" } ];
class App extends React.Component { state = { filteredInfo: null, sortedInfo: null };
handleChange = (pagination, filters, sorter) => { console.log("Various parameters", pagination, filters, sorter); this.setState({ filteredInfo: filters, sortedInfo: sorter }); };
clearFilters = () => { this.setState({ filteredInfo: null }); };
clearAll = () => { this.setState({ filteredInfo: null, sortedInfo: null }); };
setAgeSort = () => { this.setState({ sortedInfo: { order: "descend", columnKey: "age" } }); };
render() { let { sortedInfo } = this.state; sortedInfo = sortedInfo || {}; const columns = [ { title: "Name", dataIndex: "name", key: "name", sorter: (a,b) => (a.name > b.name) ? 1 : ((b.name > a.name) ? -1 : 0), sortOrder: sortedInfo.columnKey === "name" && sortedInfo.order, ellipsis: true }, { title: "Age", dataIndex: "age", key: "age", sorter: (a, b) => a.age - b.age, sortOrder: sortedInfo.columnKey === "age" && sortedInfo.order, ellipsis: true }, { title: "Address", dataIndex: "address", key: "address", sorter: (a,b) => (a.address > b.address) ? 1 : ((b.address > a.address) ? -1 : 0), sortOrder: sortedInfo.columnKey === "address" && sortedInfo.order, ellipsis: true } ]; return ( <> <Table columns={columns} dataSource={data} onChange={this.handleChange} /> </> ); } }
ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById("container"));

<!-- language: lang-html -->
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/16.6.3/umd/react.production.min.js"></script> <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react-dom/16.6.3/umd/react-dom.production.min.js"></script>

<!-- end snippet -->

That's [*property spread notation*][1]. It was added in ES2018 (spread for arrays/iterables was earlier, ES2015), but it's been supported in React projects for a long time via transpilation (as "[JSX spread attributes][2]" even though you could do it elsewhere, too, not just attributes).
`{...this.props}` *spreads out* the "own" enumerable properties in `props` as discrete properties on the `Modal` element you're creating. For instance, if `this.props` contained `a: 1` and `b: 2`, then
<Modal {...this.props} title='Modal heading' animation={false}>
would be the same as
<Modal a={this.props.a} b={this.props.b} title='Modal heading' animation={false}>
But it's dynamic, so whatever "own" properties are in `props` are included.
Since `children` is an "own" property in `props`, spread will include it. So if the component where this appears had child elements, they'll be passed on to `Modal`. Putting child elements between the opening tag and closing tags is just syntactic sugar&nbsp;&mdash; the good kind&nbsp;&mdash; for putting a `children` property in the opening tag. Example:
<!-- begin snippet: js hide: true console: true babel: true -->
<!-- language: lang-js -->
class Example extends React.Component { render() { const { className, children } = this.props; return ( <div className={className}> {children} </div> ); } } ReactDOM.render( [ <Example className="first"> <span>Child in first</span> </Example>, <Example className="second" children={<span>Child in second</span>} /> ], document.getElementById("root") );
<!-- language: lang-css -->
.first { color: green; } .second { color: blue; }
<!-- language: lang-html -->
<div id="root"></div>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/16.6.3/umd/react.production.min.js"></script> <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react-dom/16.6.3/umd/react-dom.production.min.js"></script>
<!-- end snippet -->
Spread notation is handy not only for that use case, but for creating a new object with most (or all) of the properties of an existing object&nbsp;&mdash; which comes up a lot when you're updating state, since you can't modify state directly:
this.setState(prevState => { return {foo: {...prevState.foo, a: "updated"}}; });
That replaces `this.state.foo` with a new object with all the same properties as `foo` except the `a` property, which becomes `"updated"`:
<!-- begin snippet: js hide: true console: true babel: false -->
<!-- language: lang-js -->
const obj = { foo: { a: 1, b: 2, c: 3 } }; console.log("original", obj.foo); // Creates a NEW object and assigns it to `obj.foo` obj.foo = {...obj.foo, a: "updated"}; console.log("updated", obj.foo);

<!-- language: lang-css -->
.as-console-wrapper { max-height: 100% !important; }
<!-- end snippet -->

[1]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Spread_syntax [2]: https://reactjs.org/docs/jsx-in-depth.html#spread-attributes

        
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