react-native/docs/HandlingTextInput.md
Hector Ramos b1ecb84c97 Standardize on using AwesomeProject for AppRegistry calls.
Summary:
We've noticed that many newcomers paste sample code straight into a project created using `react-native init AwesomeProject`, but the sample code assumes the user is creating a new project for each example. This PR makes it so that these samples can be pasted into the same project from the Getting Started.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/14264

Differential Revision: D5149746

Pulled By: hramos

fbshipit-source-id: cae95ab5b7baf64ddd9fe12d342ad05f785bb381
2017-05-30 14:20:42 -07:00

52 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown

---
id: handling-text-input
title: Handling Text Input
layout: docs
category: The Basics
permalink: docs/handling-text-input.html
next: using-a-scrollview
previous: flexbox
---
[`TextInput`](docs/textinput.html#content) is a basic component that allows the user to enter text. It has an `onChangeText` prop that takes
a function to be called every time the text changed, and an `onSubmitEditing` prop that takes a function to be called when the text is submitted.
For example, let's say that as the user types, you're translating their words into a different language. In this new language, every single word is written the same way: 🍕. So the sentence "Hello there Bob" would be translated
as "🍕🍕🍕".
```ReactNativeWebPlayer
import React, { Component } from 'react';
import { AppRegistry, Text, TextInput, View } from 'react-native';
export default class PizzaTranslator extends Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {text: ''};
}
render() {
return (
<View style={{padding: 10}}>
<TextInput
style={{height: 40}}
placeholder="Type here to translate!"
onChangeText={(text) => this.setState({text})}
/>
<Text style={{padding: 10, fontSize: 42}}>
{this.state.text.split(' ').map((word) => word && '🍕').join(' ')}
</Text>
</View>
);
}
}
// skip this line if using Create React Native App
AppRegistry.registerComponent('AwesomeProject', () => PizzaTranslator);
```
In this example, we store `text` in the state, because it changes over time.
There are a lot more things you might want to do with a text input. For example, you could validate the text inside while the user types. For more detailed examples, see the [React docs on controlled components](https://facebook.github.io/react/docs/forms.html), or the [reference docs for TextInput](docs/textinput.html).
Text input is probably the simplest example of a component whose state naturally changes over time. Next, let's look at another type of component like this one that controls layout, and [learn about the ScrollView](docs/using-a-scrollview.html).