The term “render prop” refers to a technique for sharing code between React components using a prop whose value is a function.
<DataProvider render={data => ( <h1>Hello {data.target}</h1> )}/>
Components are the primary unit of code reuse in React, but it’s not always obvious how to share the state or behavior that one component encapsulates to other components that need that same state
More concretely, a render prop is a function prop that a component uses to know what to render.
class Cat extends React.Component { render() { const mouse = this.props.mouse; return ( <img src="/cat.jpg" style={{ position: 'absolute', left: mouse.x, top: mouse.y }} /> ); } } class Mouse extends React.Component { constructor(props) { super(props); this.handleMouseMove = this.handleMouseMove.bind(this); this.state = { x: 0, y: 0 }; } handleMouseMove(event) { this.setState({ x: event.clientX, y: event.clientY }); } render() { return ( <div style={{ height: '100vh' }} onm ouseMove={this.handleMouseMove}> {/* Instead of providing a static representation of what <Mouse> renders, use the `render` prop to dynamically determine what to render. */} {this.props.render(this.state)} </div> ); } } class MouseTracker extends React.Component { render() { return ( <div> <h1>Move the mouse around!</h1> <Mouse render={mouse => ( <Cat mouse={mouse} /> )}/> </div> ); } }