This is a confusion between constructors and instances.
Remember that when you write a component in React:
class Greeter extends React.Component<any, any> {
render() {
return <div>Hello, {this.props.whoToGreet}</div>;
}
}
You use it this way:
return <Greeter whoToGreet='world' />;
You don't use it this way:
let Greet = new Greeter();
return <Greet whoToGreet='world' />;
In the first example, we're passing around Greeter
, the constructor function for our component. That's the correct usage. In the second example, we're passing around an instance of Greeter
. That's incorrect, and will fail at runtime with an error like "Object is not a function".
The problem with this code
function renderGreeting(Elem: React.Component<any, any>) {
return <span>Hello, <Elem />!</span>;
}
is that it's expecting an instance of React.Component
. What you want is a function that takes a constructor for React.Component
:
function renderGreeting(Elem: new() => React.Component<any, any>) {
return <span>Hello, <Elem />!</span>;
}
or similarly:
function renderGreeting(Elem: typeof React.Component) {
return <span>Hello, <Elem />!</span>;
}
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…