Chris LaRose

React beginner tutorial: implementing the board game Go

React is “a javascript library for building user interfaces”. If you haven’t done so already, I highly recommend you watch Pete Hunt’s presentation on React’s design principles. React is a relatively simple library, especially when compared to full-fledged MVC frameworks like Angular, Ember, Backbone, and the rest. It’s a pleasure to work with, so let’s get started.

Note: There’s code fragments sprinkled throughout this post. To see the source code for the final application, check out my Github repository.

Today, we’ll be implementing the board game Go. If you don’t know how to play, that’s okay. All you need to know for now is that players alternate placing stones on intersections of the board’s grid to capture their opponent’s stones and claim the greatest amount of territory. Take a look at the live preview to get an idea of what we’ll be building.

Let’s start with index.html.

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
  <head>
    <title>React Go Tutorial</title>
    <link type="text/css" href="style.css" rel="stylesheet" />
  </head>
  <body>
    <div id="main">
    </div>
    <script src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/0.8.0/react.min.js"></script>
    <script src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/0.8.0/JSXTransformer.js"></script>
    <script src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/underscore.js/1.5.2/underscore-min.js"></script>
    <script type="text/javascript" src="board.js"></script>
    <script type="text/jsx" src="go.js"></script>
  </body>
</html>

There’s nothing too surprising here. Notice that we include JSXTransformer.js. This is React’s preprocessor. It allows us to use a special custom syntax to describe our React views that’s more akin to writing HTML than Javascript. While developing, relying on the client to preprocess your React files is fine, but when you go to production, make sure you precompile those assets. Please note that the dependency above on Underscore.js isn’t necessary to build React apps, but I use it in my application logic because it provides some nice utility functions that Javascript doesn’t give us out of the box.

Application logic first

Above, I include both board.js and go.js. board.js contains all of the game logic. It’s always a good idea to separate application logic from presentation logic, and React encourages this practice. Note that board.js has no dependency on React at all: it’s just vanilla Javascript that we know and love.

/*
 * board.js - Game logic for the board game Go
 */
var Board = function(size) {
    this.current_color = Board.BLACK;
    this.size = size;
    this.board = this.create_board(size);
    this.last_move_passed = false;
    this.in_atari = false;
    this.attempted_suicide = false;
};

Board.EMPTY = 0;
Board.BLACK = 1;
Board.WHITE = 2;

/*
 * Returns a size x size matrix with all entries initialized to Board.EMPTY
 */
Board.prototype.create_board = function(size) {
    var m = [];
    for (var i = 0; i < size; i++) {
        m[i] = [];
        for (var j = 0; j < size; j++)
            m[i][j] = Board.EMPTY;
    }
    return m;
};

/*
 * Switches the current player
 */
Board.prototype.switch_player = function() {
    this.current_color =
        this.current_color == Board.BLACK ? Board.WHITE : Board.BLACK;
};

/*
 * At any point in the game, a player can pass and let his opponent play
 */
Board.prototype.pass = function() {
    if (this.last_move_passed)
        this.end_game();
    this.last_move_passed = true;
    this.switch_player();
};

/*
 * Called when the game ends (both players passed)
 */
Board.prototype.end_game = function() {
    console.log("GAME OVER");
};

/*
 * Attempt to place a stone at (i,j). Returns true iff the move was legal
 */
Board.prototype.play = function(i, j) {
    console.log("Played at " + i + ", " + j);
    this.attempted_suicide = this.in_atari = false;

    if (this.board[i][j] != Board.EMPTY)
        return false;

    var color = this.board[i][j] = this.current_color;
    var captured = [];
    var neighbors = this.get_adjacent_intersections(i, j);
    var atari = false;

    var self = this;
    _.each(neighbors, function(n) {
        var state = self.board[n[0]][n[1]];
        if (state != Board.EMPTY && state != color) {
            var group = self.get_group(n[0], n[1]);
            console.log(group);
            if (group["liberties"] == 0)
                captured.push(group);
            else if (group["liberties"] == 1)
                atari = true;
        }
    });

    // detect suicide
    if (_.isEmpty(captured) && this.get_group(i, j)["liberties"] == 0) {
        this.board[i][j] = Board.EMPTY;
        this.attempted_suicide = true;
        return false;
    }

    var self = this;
    _.each(captured, function(group) {
        _.each(group["stones"], function(stone) {
            self.board[stone[0]][stone[1]] = Board.EMPTY;
        });
    });

    if (atari)
        this.in_atari = true;

    this.last_move_passed = false;
    this.switch_player();
    return true;
};

/*
 * Given a board position, returns a list of [i,j] coordinates representing
 * orthagonally adjacent intersections
 */
Board.prototype.get_adjacent_intersections = function(i , j) {
    var neighbors = [];
    if (i > 0)
        neighbors.push([i - 1, j]);
    if (j < this.size - 1)
        neighbors.push([i, j + 1]);
    if (i < this.size - 1)
        neighbors.push([i + 1, j]);
    if (j > 0)
        neighbors.push([i, j - 1]);
    return neighbors;
};

/*
 * Performs a breadth-first search about an (i,j) position to find recursively
 * orthagonally adjacent stones of the same color (stones with which it shares
 * liberties). Returns null for if there is no stone at the specified position,
 * otherwise returns an object with two keys: "liberties", specifying the
 * number of liberties the group has, and "stones", the list of [i,j]
 * coordinates of the group's members.
 */
Board.prototype.get_group = function(i, j) {

    var color = this.board[i][j];
    if (color == Board.EMPTY)
        return null;

    var visited = {}; // for O(1) lookups
    var visited_list = []; // for returning
    var queue = [[i, j]];
    var count = 0;

    while (queue.length > 0) {
        var stone = queue.pop();
        if (visited[stone])
            continue;

        var neighbors = this.get_adjacent_intersections(stone[0], stone[1]);
        var self = this;
        _.each(neighbors, function(n) {
            var state = self.board[n[0]][n[1]];
            if (state == Board.EMPTY)
                count++;
            if (state == color)
                queue.push([n[0], n[1]]);
        });

        visited[stone] = true;
        visited_list.push(stone);
    }

    return {
        "liberties": count,
        "stones": visited_list
    };
}

An instance of the Board class has several attributes that describe what a game of Go looks like at a particular moment in time. This is a common paradigm in React: get familiar with building models that have attributes that can be used by themselves to build your views. Let’s take a look at how a Board is represented.

The fun part: building React Components

Now we have a good representation of the board game in pure Javascript. We can use the methods Board.pass() and Board.play(i, j) to change the game’s state. All other methods are only used by the Board class internally. Let’s start putting our UI together with React.

What follows is several segments of go.js, where we build our React components. To see the file in full, check it out on Github. We begin the file with a comment declaring that this file should be preprocessed by JSX. Also, we create a constant called GRID_SIZE, which will store the pixel dimensions of a grid square on our game board.

/** @jsx React.DOM */
var GRID_SIZE = 40;

Next, let’s build out first React component. This one’s pretty simple. It represents a single grid intersection on the Go board.

var BoardIntersection = React.createClass({
    handleClick: function() {
        if (this.props.board.play(this.props.row, this.props.col))
            this.props.onPlay();
    },
    render: function() {
        var style = {
            top: this.props.row * GRID_SIZE,
            left: this.props.col * GRID_SIZE
        };

        var classes = "intersection ";
        if (this.props.color != Board.EMPTY)
            classes += this.props.color == Board.BLACK ? "black" : "white";

        return (
            <div onClick={this.handleClick}
                className={classes} style={style}></div>
        );
    }
});

BoardIntersection has several properties that we can pass when we initialize an instance:

Next, let’s build the Component that represents the game board.

var BoardView = React.createClass({
    render: function() {
        var intersections = [];
        for (var i = 0; i < this.props.board.size; i++)
            for (var j = 0; j < this.props.board.size; j++)
                intersections.push(BoardIntersection({
                    board: this.props.board,
                    color: this.props.board.board[i][j],
                    row: i,
                    col: j,
                    onPlay: this.props.onPlay
                }));
        var style = {
            width: this.props.board.size * GRID_SIZE,
            height: this.props.board.size * GRID_SIZE
        };
        return <div style={style} id="board">{intersections}</div>;
    }
});

BoardView has only two properties we’ll use: BoardView.board and BoardView.onPlay. These properties play the same roles here as they did in BoardIntersection. In the render method of this Component, we create n x n instances of BoardIntersection and add them each in as children.

Next, we create a few more components: one to display alert messages and another that provides a button to pass your turn.

var AlertView = React.createClass({
    render: function() {
        var text = "";
        if (this.props.board.in_atari)
            text = "ATARI!";
        else if (this.props.board.attempted_suicide)
            text = "SUICIDE!";

        return (
            <div id="alerts">{text}</div>
        );
    }
});

var PassView = React.createClass({
    handleClick: function(e) {
        this.props.board.pass();
    },
    render: function() {
        return (
            <input id="pass-btn" type="button" value="Pass"
                onClick={this.handleClick} />
        );
    }
});

Finally, we build a component to wrap all of our sub-Components up. We initialize an instance of our model, and call React.renderComponent to bind a Component to a DOM element.

var ContainerView = React.createClass({
    getInitialState: function() {
        return {'board': this.props.board};
    },
    onBoardUpdate: function() {
        this.setState({"board": this.props.board});
    },
    render: function() {
        return (
            <div>
                <AlertView board={this.state.board} />
                <PassView board={this.state.board} />
                <BoardView board={this.state.board}
                    onPlay={this.onBoardUpdate.bind(this)} />
            </div>
        )
    }
});

var board = new Board(19);

React.renderComponent(
    <ContainerView board={board} />,
    document.getElementById('main')
);

The ContainerView is our only stateful Component. It has exactly one property of its state: board, which is initialized to the board passed to it via its props. We pass a callback function called this.onBoardUpdate to the BoardView, so we can be notified when the board has changed.

How it all works

In the onBoardUpdate callback, we call this.setState, which notifies React that our model has changed, and React should then re-render our component so that it reflects the current model state. This is where the magic of React comes in: we can naively pretend that every time we call this.setState, React replaces our DOM element with whatever was returned by our Component’s render method. In practice, this is all you have to know, and for the most part, we can go on happily thinking in this way.

In practice, it’s much too expensive to actually do all of that DOM manipulation every time the application state changes. So behind the scenes, React actually computes the minimal set of changes in the virtual DOM representation returned by a Component’s render method each time setState is called, then performs only those updates. In our case, that usually just means changing a single class name of a <div> that represents a board intersection, or possibly several, if you capture your opponent’s stones.

React simplifies the process of writing application UIs because we don’t have to think about how our model changes over time and how our view responds incrementally, all while incurring only marginal performance penalty. It’s really a pleasure to work with, and I hope that it gains traction and sets a paradigm moving forward in the Javascript MVC scene.

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