@pantheon-systems/pcc-react-sdk
v3.10.0-beta.2
Published
Pantheon Content Cloud React SDK
Downloads
268
Readme
React
Installation
npm install @pantheon-systems/pcc-react-sdk
Setup
import {
PantheonClient,
PantheonProvider,
} from "@pantheon-systems/pcc-react-sdk";
// Create a client
const pantheonClient = new PantheonClient();
// Wrap your app in the provider
function App() {
return (
// Pass the client to the provider
<PantheonProvider client={pantheonClient}>
<Blog />
</PantheonProvider>
);
}
Usage
We provide a set of helpers in the form of API helpers, React hooks and React helper components to get you up and running with the Pantheon Content Cloud API.
React Components
Article Renderer
The <ArticleRenderer />
component will render the article received from
Content Cloud by converting the raw article data into React elements you can
style and render in your app.
import { ArticleRenderer } from "@pantheon-systems/pcc-react-sdk";
function ArticlePage({ id }) {
const { article } = useArticle(id);
return (
<main>
{
// Render the article
article && <ArticleRenderer article={article} />
}
</main>
);
}
React Hooks
useArticle
Fetch an article by ID.
import { useArticle } from "@pantheon-systems/pcc-react-sdk";
function Article({ id }) {
const { article, loading, error } = useArticle(id);
if (loading) {
return <div>Loading...</div>;
}
if (error) {
return <div>Error: {error.message}</div>;
}
return (
<div>
<h1>{article.title}</h1>
<div dangerouslySetInnerHTML={{ __html: article.body }} />
</div>
);
}
useArticles
Fetch a list of available articles.
import { useArticles } from "@pantheon-systems/pcc-react-sdk";
function Articles() {
const { articles, loading, error } = useArticles();
if (loading) {
return <div>Loading...</div>;
}
if (error) {
return <div>Error: {error.message}</div>;
}
return (
<ul>
{articles.map((article) => (
<li key={article.id}>
<a href={`/articles/${article.id}`}>{article.title}</a>
</li>
))}
</ul>
);
}
API Helpers
These helpers are used to fetch data from the Pantheon Content Cloud API outside of the React component lifecycle.
They are useful for fetching data in server-side rendered applications or in other contexts where React hooks cannot be used.
getArticle
Fetch an article by ID.
import { getArticle } from "@pantheon-systems/pcc-react-sdk";
// In Next.js getServerSideProps for example
export async function getServerSideProps({ params }) {
const article = await getArticle(
pantheonClient, // The PantheonClient instance initialized in [Setup](#Setup)
params.id,
);
return {
props: {
article,
},
};
}
getArticles
Fetch a list of available articles, excluding their content.
import { getArticles } from "@pantheon-systems/pcc-react-sdk";
// In Next.js getStaticPaths for example
export async function getStaticPaths() {
const articles = await getArticles(pantheonClient); // The PantheonClient instance initialized in [Setup](#Setup)
const paths = articles.map((article) => ({
params: { slug: article.id },
}));
return {
paths,
fallback: true,
};
}
Creating your own smart components
Create the smart component
import { forwardRef } from "react";
import { useBaseSmartComponent } from "./hooks/useBaseSmartComponent";
const MyAwesomeComponent = forwardRef(function ({ title, body }, ref) {
useBaseSmartComponent();
return <div><h3>{title}</h3><p>{body}</p></div>;
Provide it to the PantheonAPI's smart component map. (Note that other properties should be passed in too, such as getPantheonClient and resolvePath). See the NextJS starter kit for a clearer reference.
PantheonAPI({
smartComponentMap: {
AWESOME_COMPONENT: {
reactComponent: MyAwesomeComponent,
title: "My Awesome Component",
iconUrl: null,
fields: {
title: {
required: true,
type: "string",
},
body: {
required: false,
type: "string",
},
},
},
},
});