@public-ui/stencil-react-output-target
v0.6.0
Published
React output target for @stencil/core components.
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@public-ui/stencil-react-output-target
Stencil can generate React class component wrappers for your web components. This allows your Stencil components to be used within a React application. The benefits of using Stencil's component wrappers over the standard web components include:
- Typings for your components
- JSX bindings for custom events (event names are renamed to match React's convention of
onEventName
) - Tag names are renamed to match PascalCase convention.
- Adds support for property types outside of string and number (supports: functions, objects and arrays).
For a detailed guide on how to add the react output target to a project, visit: https://stenciljs.com/docs/react.
Installation
npm install @public-ui/stencil-react-output-target
Usage
In your stencil.config.ts
add the following configuration to the outputTargets
section:
import { Config } from '@stencil/core';
import { reactOutputTarget } from '@public-ui/stencil-react-output-target';
export const config: Config = {
namespace: 'demo',
outputTargets: [
reactOutputTarget({
componentCorePackage: 'component-library',
proxiesFile: '../component-library-react/src/components.ts',
}),
{
type: 'dist',
esmLoaderPath: '../loader',
},
],
};
Config Options
| Property | Description |
| ----------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| componentCorePackage
| The NPM package name of your Stencil component library. This package is used as a dependency for your React wrappers. |
| proxiesFile
| The output file of all the component wrappers generated by the output target. This file path should point to a location within your React library/project. |
| excludeComponents
| An array of tag names to exclude from generating component wrappers for. This is helpful when have a custom framework implementation of a specific component or need to extend the base component wrapper behavior. |
| loaderDir
| This is the path to where the defineCustomElements
function exists in your built project. If loaderDir
is not provided, the /dist/loader
directory will be used. |
| includePolyfills
| If true
, polyfills will automatically be imported and the applyPolyfills
function will be called in your proxies file. This can only be used when lazy loading Web Components and will not work when includeImportCustomElements
is true
. |
| includeDefineCustomElements
| If true
, all Web Components will automatically be registered with the Custom Elements Registry. This can only be used when lazy loading Web Components and will not work when includeImportCustomElements
is true
. |
| includeImportCustomElements
| If true
, the output target will import the custom element instance and register it with the Custom Elements Registry when the component is imported inside of a user's app. This can only be used with the Custom Elements Bundle and will not work with lazy loaded components. |
| customElementsDir
| This is the directory where the custom elements are imported from when using the Custom Elements Bundle. Defaults to the components
directory. Only applies when includeImportCustomElements
is true
. |
Runtime Config Options
If you want to use custom tag names, you can use the setTagNameTransformer
function to define a function which transforms the tag names.
It is recommended to configure this before you use the component library.
import { setTagNameTransformer } from '<your-library>/react';
setTagNameTransformer((tagName: string) => `${tagName}-v2`);