Can't Get The Target Attributes Of Material-ui Select React Component


Answer :

Update 2

In response to your comments:

As per the material-ui docs, getting back the touchtap event on option element rather than the select element is expected. If you want the id and name of the element, I would suggest binding the variables to the callback:

The onchange method in the parent component:

_onChange(id, name, evt, key, payload) {    console.log(id);  //id of select   console.log(name); //name of name   console.log(payload); //value of selected option } 

And when you attach it to the select component, you need to use bind

   <Select      value={this.props.test}      name={"test"}      id={"test"}      onChange={this.props.onChange.bind(null,"id","name")}      hintText={"Select a fitch rating service"}> 

Update

Here are the react event docs. Under the event-pooling you will find reference to the use of e.persists() in the block quote. The explanation given in this issue is that React pools the event object, so it get's reused when another event is fired.


React has a rather special event object. It wraps the native event in a synthetic event, which is what event points to in your _onChange method. The problem is that this synthetic event object is recycled and reused for the next event, so it is garbage collected and set to null. I don't think this is well documented, but I'll search for a link and update this answer once I find it.

The solution is for the first line in your event handler to make a copy of the event, persist it, or get a reference to the native event:

Make a copy of the event

_onChange = (event, index, value) => {   e = _.cloneDeep(event); // Here I'm using the cloneDeep method provided by underscore / lodash . User whatever library you prefer.    console.log(e.target.id);    console.log(e.target.name);  }; 

Persist the event

_onChange = (event, index, value) => {   event.persist() // This stops react from garbage collecting the event object. It may impact performance, but I doubt by much.   console.log(event.target.id);    console.log(event.target.name);  }; 

Get a reference to the native event object

_onChange = (event, index, value) => {   e = event.native; // This looks the same as a vanilla JS event   console.log(e.target.id);    console.log(e.target.name);  }; 

I'd keep it simpler using event.currentTarget instead of event.target. In your event handler, you can access the attribute of interest from the element that triggered the event by:

_onChange(evt) {     console.log(evt.currentTarget.getAttribute("data-name");     console.log(evt.currentTarget.getAttribute("data-value"); } 

thus calling .getAttribute on the attribute name prepended by "data-"


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