ternary operator in jsx to include html with react

I'm using react and I'm trying to display this error message if this.state.message === 'failed'. But I'm really not sure why this ternary operation isn't working. What am I doing wrong here?

render() {
    ...
    <div className="row">
        return (this.state.message === 'failed') ? ( =>{" "}
        {
            <div className="alert alert-danger" role="alert">
                Something went wrong
            </div>
        }
        )() : false; }
    </div>
}

Right now its just displaying return (this.state.message === 'failed') ? ( => in the html


I currently like to format my ternaries like this in react:

render () {
  return (
    <div className="row">
      { //Check if message failed
        (this.state.message === 'failed')
          ? <div> Something went wrong </div> 
          : <div> Everything in the world is fine </div> 
      }
    </div>
  );
}

You are correct that IIFEs can be used within a render statement as well as ternary expressions. Using a normal if .. else statement is valid, but the render function's return statement can only contain expressions so you would have to do those elsewhere..


The syntax for ternary is condition ? if : else. To be safe, you can always wrap the entire ternary statement inside parenthesis. JSX elements are also wrapped in parenthesis. The fat arrow in an arrow function is always preceeded by two parenthesis (for the arguments) - but you don't need any functions here anyway. So given all of that, there are a couple of syntax errors in your code. Here's a working solution:

render() {
  return (this.state.message === 'failed' ? (
   <div className="alert alert-danger" role="alert">
     Something went wrong
   </div>
  ) : null);
}

Edit: if this is inside other markup, then you don't need to call render again. You can just use curly braces for interpolation.

render() {
  return (
    <div className="row">
      {this.state.message === 'failed' ? (
       <div className="alert alert-danger" role="alert">
         Something went wrong
       </div>
      ) : null}
    </div>
  );
}

The accepted answer by @Nathan and other similar answers are correct. But it's worth noting that the result for ? and the result for : must each be a single element or wrapped in a single element (or the result may be null | undefined, either of which qualifies as a single element). In the example below, the result for ? will work but the result for : will fail....

return (
  {this.state.message === 'failed' ? (
      <div>
        <row>three elements wrapped</row>
        <row>inside</row>
        <row>another element work.</row>
      </div>
    ) : (
      <row>html like</row>
      <row>haiku</row>
      <row>must follow rules of structure.</row>
    )
  }
)