My Blog

My WordPress Blog

My Blog

My WordPress Blog

FusionFrame

Setting Up Your Environment

If you haven’t set up a React project yet, use Create React App:

bashCopy codenpx create-react-app fusion-frame
cd fusion-frame

Step 2: Create Basic Components

We’ll create three main components: PhotoGallery, UploadPhoto, and PhotoItem.

1. Create PhotoItem.js

In the src folder, create a new file called PhotoItem.js:

jsxCopy code// src/PhotoItem.js
import React from 'react';

const PhotoItem = ({ photo, onDelete }) => {
  return (
<div style={styles.photoItem}>
  <img src={photo.url} alt={photo.name} style={styles.image} />
  <button onClick={onDelete}>Delete</button>
</div>
); }; const styles = { photoItem: {
margin: 10,
display: 'inline-block',
textAlign: 'center',
}, image: {
width: 150,
height: 150,
objectFit: 'cover',
}, }; export default PhotoItem;

2. Create UploadPhoto.js

Now create another file called UploadPhoto.js:

jsxCopy code// src/UploadPhoto.js
import React, { useState } from 'react';

const UploadPhoto = ({ onUpload }) => {
  const [file, setFile] = useState(null);

  const handleChange = (e) => {
setFile(e.target.files[0]);
}; const handleSubmit = (e) => {
e.preventDefault();
if (file) {
  const reader = new FileReader();
  reader.onloadend = () => {
    onUpload({ name: file.name, url: reader.result });
    setFile(null);
  };
  reader.readAsDataURL(file);
}
}; return (
<form onSubmit={handleSubmit}>
  <input type="file" onChange={handleChange} accept="image/*" />
  <button type="submit">Upload Photo</button>
</form>
); }; export default UploadPhoto;

3. Create PhotoGallery.js

Next, create the main gallery component PhotoGallery.js:

jsxCopy code// src/PhotoGallery.js
import React from 'react';
import PhotoItem from './PhotoItem';

const PhotoGallery = ({ photos, onDelete }) => {
  return (
<div style={styles.gallery}>
  {photos.map((photo, index) => (
    <PhotoItem
      key={index}
      photo={photo}
      onDelete={() => onDelete(index)}
    />
  ))}
</div>
); }; const styles = { gallery: {
display: 'flex',
flexWrap: 'wrap',
justifyContent: 'center',
}, }; export default PhotoGallery;

Step 4: Main Application Component

Now, let’s integrate everything in App.js.

jsxCopy code// src/App.js
import React, { useState } from 'react';
import UploadPhoto from './UploadPhoto';
import PhotoGallery from './PhotoGallery';

const App = () => {
  const [photos, setPhotos] = useState([]);

  const uploadPhoto = (photo) => {
setPhotos([...photos, photo]);
}; const deletePhoto = (index) => {
const newPhotos = photos.filter((_, i) => i !== index);
setPhotos(newPhotos);
}; return (
<div style={styles.container}>
  <h1>FusionFrame: Photo Gallery</h1>
  <UploadPhoto onUpload={uploadPhoto} />
  <PhotoGallery photos={photos} onDelete={deletePhoto} />
</div>
); }; const styles = { container: {
padding: '20px',
textAlign: 'center',
}, }; export default App;

Step 5: Run Your Application

Now you can start your application. In your terminal, run:

bashCopy codenpm start

Step 6: Explore and Enhance

You now have a basic React application called “FusionFrame” that allows you to upload and manage a gallery of photos. You can enhance it by adding features like:

  • Image previews before uploading
  • Categorizing photos
  • Storing photos in local storage for persistence

Summary

In this tutorial, you created a simple photo gallery app using React. You learned how to manage state, create reusable components, and handle file uploads.

FusionFrame

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to top