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7 - Assignment Soln.md

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Namaste React Course by Akshay Saini

Episode 07 - Finding the Path

Q: What are various ways to add images into our App? Explain with code examples.

A: Using the full URL of the image for the web (CDN) or any public images. Example :

<img src="https://reactjs.org/logo-og.png" alt="React Image" />

Adding the image into the project Drag your image into your project and import it into the desired component

import reactLogo from "./reactLogo.png";
export default function App() {
  return <img src={reactLogo} alt="react logo" />
}

The correct way to structure images in your project is to add them in an images folder. If you are using other assets than just images, you might want to add all in the assets folders.

import reactLogo from "../../assets/images/reactLogo.png";
export default function App() {
  return <img src={reactLogo} alt="react logo" />
}

Q: What would happen if we do console.log(useState())?

A: If we do console.log(useState()), we get an array [undefined, function] where first item in an array is state is undefined and the second item in an array is setState function is bound dispatchSetState.

Q: How will useEffect behave if we don't add a dependency array?

A: Syntax of useEffect is:

useEffect(() => {}, []);

Case 1 : When the dependency array is not included in the arguments of useEffect() hook, the callback function will be executed every time the component is rendered and re-rendered.

useEffect(() => {
	console.log("I run everytime this component rerenders")
});

Case 2 : When the dependency array is empty in the arguments of useEffect() hook, the callback function will be executed only one time during the initial render of the component.

useEffect(() => {
	console.log("I Only run once (When the component gets mounted)")
}, []);

Case 3 : When the dependency array contains a condition, the callback function will be executed one time during the initial render of the component and also rerender if there is a change in the condition.

useEffect(() => {
	console.log("I run every-time when my condition changed")
}, [condition]);

Q: What is SPA?

A: Single Page Application (SPA) is a web application that dynamically updates the webpage with data from web server without reloading/refreshing the entire page. All the HTML, CSS, JS are retrieved in the initial load and other data/resources can be loaded dynamically whenever required. An SPA is sometimes referred to as a single-page interface (SPI).

Q: What is the difference between Client Side Routing and Server Side Routing?

A: In Server-side routing or rendering (SSR), every change in URL, http request is made to server to fetch the webpage, and replace the current webpage with the older one.

In Client-side routing or rendering (CSR), during the first load, the webapp is loaded from server to client, after which whenever there is a change in URL, the router library navigates the user to the new page without sending any request to backend. All Single Page Applications uses client-side routing.