Conditional Rendering In React, you can create distinct components that encapsulate behavior you need. Then, you can render only some of them, depending on the state of your application. Conditional rendering in React works the same way conditions work in JavaScript. Use JavaScript operators like if or the conditional operator to create elements representing the current state, and let React update the UI to match them. Consider these two components: function UserGreeting(props) { return Welcome back!; } function GuestGreeting(props) { return Please sign up.; } We’ll create a Greeting component that displays either of these components depending on whether a user is logged in: function Greeting(props) { const isLoggedIn = props.isLoggedIn; if (isLoggedIn) { return ; } return ;} const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root')); // Try changing to isLoggedIn={true}: root.render(); Try it on CodePen This example renders a different greeting depending on the value of isLoggedIn prop. Element Variables You can use variables to store elements. This can help you conditionally render a part of the component while the rest of the output doesn’t change. Consider these two new components representing Logout and Login buttons: function LoginButton(props) { return ( Login ); } function LogoutButton(props) { return ( Logout ); } In the example below, we will create a stateful component called LoginControl. It will render either or depending on its current state. It will also render a from the previous example: class LoginControl extends React.Component { constructor(props) { super(props); this.handleLoginClick = this.handleLoginClick.bind(this); this.handleLogoutClick = this.handleLogoutClick.bind(this); this.state = {isLoggedIn: false}; } handleLoginClick() { this.setState({isLoggedIn: true}); } handleLogoutClick() { this.setState({isLoggedIn: false}); } render() { const isLoggedIn = this.state.isLoggedIn; let button; if (isLoggedIn) { button = ; } else { button = ; } return ( {button} ); } } const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root')); root.render(); Try it on CodePen While declaring a variable and using an if statement is a fine way to conditionally render a component, sometimes you might want to use a shorter syntax. There are a few ways to inline conditions in JSX, explained below. Inline If with Logical && Operator You may embed expressions in JSX by wrapping them in curly braces. This includes the JavaScript logical && operator. It can be handy for conditionally including an element: function Mailbox(props) { const unreadMessages = props.unreadMessages; return ( Hello! {unreadMessages.length > 0 && You have {unreadMessages.length} unread messages. } ); } const messages = ['React', 'Re: React', 'Re:Re: React']; const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root')); root.render(); Try it on CodePen It works because in JavaScript, true && expression always evaluates to expression, and false && expression always evaluates to false. Therefore, if the condition is true, the element right after && will appear in the output. If it is false, React will ignore and skip it. Note that returning a falsy expression will still cause the element after && to be skipped but will return the falsy expression. In the example below, 0 will be returned by the render method. render() { const count = 0; return ( {count && Messages: {count}} ); } Inline If-Else with Conditional Operator Another method for conditionally rendering elements inline is to use the JavaScript conditional operator condition ? true : false. In the example below, we use it to conditionally render a small block of text. render() { const isLoggedIn = this.state.isLoggedIn; return ( The user is {isLoggedIn ? 'currently' : 'not'} logged in. ); } It can also be used for larger expressions although it is less obvious what’s going on: render() { const isLoggedIn = this.state.isLoggedIn; return ( {isLoggedIn ? : } ); } Just like in JavaScript, it is up to you to choose an appropriate style based on what you and your team consider more readable. Also remember that whenever conditions become too complex, it might be a good time to extract a component. Preventing Component from Rendering In rare cases you might want a component to hide itself even though it was rendered by another component. To do this return null instead of its render output. In the example below, the is rendered depending on the value of the prop called warn. If the value of the prop is false, then the component does not render: function WarningBanner(props) { if (!props.warn) { return null; } return ( Warning! ); } class Page extends React.Component { constructor(props) { super(props); this.state = {showWarning: true}; this.handleToggleClick = this.handleToggleClick.bind(this); } handleToggleClick() { this.setState(state => ({ showWarning: !state.showWarning })); } render() { return ( {this.state.showWarning ? 'Hide' : 'Show'} ); } } const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root')); root.render(); Try it on CodePen Returning null from a component’s render method does not affect the firing of the component’s lifecycle methods. 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