erjoiwjrei
v0.3.2
Published
Easily add user-defined extensions into your react application
Downloads
5
Readme
mutate-core
@react-mutate/core
lets you swap out nodes in React's virtual DOM and contains mutate
and MutationsProvider
.
Using mutate
react-mutate
asks you to create a JSON map with displayNames
or function names as keys and React Higher Order Components as values.
If you haven't seen HOC's before, they're basically just functions that take a React component and then return a different or modified React component.
So for example, we might make something like this:
// A function that takes a React component and returns a modified version.
const insideHeader = Component => {
return props => <h1> <Component {...props}/> </h1>;
};
// The mutations we got from our users
const userMutations = {
"Text" : insideHeader
}
Now, we'll wrap our React component in mutate
and then any item with the displayName
or name
Text
will render with <h1>
's.
// ... other imports
import { mutate } from "react-mutate";
const Text = ({children}) => <p> {children} </p>;
class MyComponent extends React.Component {
render() {
return <Text> Hello World! </Text>;
}
}
export default mutate(MyComponent, userMutations); // Wrapping at the end
Using MutationsProvider
If you maintain a single list of all the mutations (or extensions) that your users have created, it can get tedious to pass that around everywhere, especially if you're not using something like redux.
So instead, you can use MutationProvider
which lets you define your mutations at the root of your app and then lets you magically ignore the second argument to mutate
.
For example:
// MyComponent.js
const Text = ({children}) => <p> {children} </p>;
class MyComponent extends React.Component {
render() {
return <Text> Hello World! </Text>;
}
}
export default mutate(MyComponent) // userMutations are taken care of by the MutationsProvider
// index.js
import { MutationsProvider } from 'react-mutate';
import MyComponent from "./MyComponent.js";
class App extends React.Component {
render() {
<MutationsProvider mutations={userMutations}>
<MyComponent />
</MutationsProvider>
}
}