React has implemented a browser-independent events and DOM system for performance and cross-browser compatibility reasons. We took the opportunity to clean up a few rough edges in browser DOM implementations.
- All DOM properties and attributes (including event handlers) should be camelCased to be consistent with standard JavaScript style. We intentionally break with the spec here since the spec is inconsistent. However,
data-*andaria-*attributes conform to the specs and should be lower-cased only. - The
styleattribute accepts a JavaScript object with camelCased properties rather than a CSS string. This is consistent with the DOMstyleJavaScript property, is more efficient, and prevents XSS security holes. - Since
classandforare reserved words in JavaScript, the JSX elements for built-in DOM nodes should use the attribute namesclassNameandhtmlForrespectively, (eg.<div className="foo" />). Custom elements should useclassandfordirectly (eg.<my-tag class="foo" />). - All event objects conform to the W3C spec, and all events (including submit) bubble correctly per the W3C spec. See Event System for more details.
- The
onChangeevent behaves as you would expect it to: whenever a form field is changed this event is fired rather than inconsistently on blur. We intentionally break from existing browser behavior becauseonChangeis a misnomer for its behavior and React relies on this event to react to user input in real time. See Forms for more details. - Form input attributes such as
valueandchecked, as well astextarea. More here.
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