--- title: Higher-Order Components --- ## Higher-Order Components In React, a **Higher-Order Component** (HOC) is a function that takes a component and return a new component. Programmers use HOCs to achieve **component logic reuse**. If you've used Redux's `connect`, you've already worked with Higher-Order Components. The core idea is: ```jsx const EnhancedComponent = enhance(WrappedComponent); ``` Where: * `enhance` is the Higher-Order Component; * `WrappedComponent` is the component you want to enhance; and * `EnhancedComponent` is the new component created. This could be the body of the `enhance` HOC: ```jsx function enhance(WrappedComponent) { return class extends React.Component { render() { const extraProp = 'This is an injected prop!'; return (
); } } } ``` In this case, `enhance` returns an **anonymous class** that extends `React.Component`. This new component is doing three simple things: * Rendering the `WrappedComponent` within a `div` element; * Passing its own props to the `WrappedComponent`; and * Injecting an extra prop to the `WrappedComponent`. HOCs are just a pattern that uses the power of React's compositional nature. **They add features to a component**. There are a lot more things you can do with them! ## Other Resources * [React docs: Higher-Order Components](https://reactjs.org/docs/higher-order-components.html)