Destructuring state/props in React

What eslint is telling you with the react/destructuring-assignments error is that assignments like:

const data = this.state.data;

can be rewritten into:

const { data } = this.state;

This also works for function arguments, so:

onChange = e => { ... }

can be written as

onChange = ({target: {value, name}}) => { ... }

The next error for react/no-access-state-in-setstate tells you that you are writing:

this.setState({
    data: { ...this.state.data, [e.target.name]: e.target.value }
});

when you should be writing:

this.setState(prevState => ({
    data: { ...prevState.data, [e.target.name]: e.target.value }
}));

or, if you combine it with the react/destructuring-assignments rule:

onChange = ({target: {name, value}}) =>
    this.setState(prevState => ({
        data: { ...prevState.data, [name]: value }
    }));

You can read more about those two rules here:

react/destructuring-assignment

react/no-access-state-in-setstate


Destructuring is basically syntatic sugar Some Eslint configurations prefer it (which I'm guessing is your case).

It's basically declaring the values and making them equal to the bit of syntax you don't want to repeat, for Ex, given react props:

this.props.house, this.props.dog, this.props.car

destructured --->

 const { house, dog, car } = this.props;

So now you can just use house, or dog or whatever you want. It's commonly used with states and props in react, here is more doc about it, hope it helps. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Destructuring_assignment