JSX looks like HTML but there are some important differences you may run into.
Note:
For DOM differences, such as the inline
style
attribute, check here.
HTML Entities
You can insert HTML entities within literal text in JSX:
<div>First · Second</div>
If you want to display an HTML entity within dynamic content, you will run into double escaping issues as React escapes all the strings you are displaying in order to prevent a wide range of XSS attacks by default.
// Bad: It displays "First · Second"
<div>{'First · Second'}</div>
There are various ways to work-around this issue. The easiest one is to write Unicode characters directly in JavaScript. You need to make sure that the file is saved as UTF-8 and that the proper UTF-8 directives are set so the browser will display it correctly.
<div>{'First · Second'}</div>
A safer alternative is to find the unicode number corresponding to the entity and use it inside of a JavaScript string.
<div>{'First \u00b7 Second'}</div>
<div>{'First ' + String.fromCharCode(183) + ' Second'}</div>
You can use mixed arrays with strings and JSX elements. Each JSX element in the array needs a unique key.
<div>{['First ', <span key="middot">·</span>, ' Second']}</div>
As a last resort, you always have the ability to insert raw HTML.
<div dangerouslySetInnerHTML={{'{{'}}__html: 'First · Second'}} />
Custom HTML Attributes
If you pass properties to native HTML elements that do not exist in the HTML specification, React will not render them. If you want to use a custom attribute, you should prefix it with data-
.
<div data-custom-attribute="foo" />
However, arbitrary attributes are supported on custom elements (those with a hyphen in the tag name or an is="..."
attribute).
<x-my-component custom-attribute="foo" />
Web Accessibility attributes starting with aria-
will be rendered properly.
<div aria-hidden={true} />