jsx-standalone
v2.1.3
Published
Use JSX without React
Downloads
5
Readme
jsx-standalone
jsx-standalone
makes it possible to use React's JSX syntax outside of React projects. Using renderBefore
and renderAfter
requires a modern browser supporting Element.insertAdjacentElement()
- all other render modes function in legacy browsers.
Installation
yarn add jsx-standalone
Usage in Babel
You'll also need to hook the jsxElem
function into the JSX transformation, for which you should probably use babel, which you can install and setup fairly simply:
yarn add @babel/preset-react @babel/preset-env
and configure babel to correctly transform JSX with a .babelrc
something like:
{
"presets": [
"@babel/preset-env",
[
"@babel/preset-react",
{
"pragma": "jsxElem.createElement",
"pragmaFrag": "jsxElem.Fragment"
}
]
]
}
Usage in esbuild
Details on how to inject jsxElem as builder can be found in the esbuild documentation. Feel free to open a PR to add specific instructions here.
Usage
Basic
The jsx-standalone
package just defines a function to replace the React.createElement
, so as well as importing the relevant function into scope where you want to use JSX:
import jsxElem, { render } from "jsx-standalone";
function App(props) {
return <div>Hello {props.name}</div>;
}
render(<App name="world" />, document.body);
or
import jsxElem, { render } from "jsx-standalone";
function App(name) {
return <div>Hello {name}</div>;
}
render(App("world"), document.body);
Components
Define
It's possible to define a component in different ways:
function Hello(props) {
return <h1>Hello {props.name}</h1>;
}
// anonymous Function
const Hello = function(props) {
return <h1>Hello {props.name}</h1>;
};
// arrow function
const Hello = props => <h1>Hello {props.name}</h1>;
// simple element
const hello = <h1>Hello</h1>;
Always start component names with a capital letter.
babel-plugin-transform-react-jsx
treats components starting with lowercase letters as DOM tags. For example <div />
is an HTML tag, but <Hello />
is a component and requires a user definition.
Please read JSX In Depth for more details and try babel example
Rendering
When rendering a component JSX attributes will be passed as single object.
For example:
import jsxElem, { render } from "jsx-standalone";
function Hello(props) {
return <h1>Hello {props.name}</h1>;
}
render(<Hello name="world" />, document.body);
There are several ways to render an element:
renderBefore
: this function renders the JSX element before the target - top level JSX element must not be a fragment.renderPrepend
: this function renders the JSX element within the target element, prepending existing content in the target element.render
: replaces the contents of the target element with the JSX element.renderAppend
: this function renders the JSX element within the target element, appending existing content in the target element.renderAfter
: this function renders the JSX element after after the target element - top level JSX element must not be a fragment.
import jsxElem, { render, renderAfterEnd, renderBeforeEnd, renderAndReplace } from "jsx-standalone";
function Hello(props) {
return <h1>Hello {props.name}</h1>;
}
renderBefore(<Hello name="world" />, document.body);
renderPrepend(<Hello name="world" />, document.body);
render(<Hello name="world" />, document.body);
renderAppend(<Hello name="world" />, document.body);
renderAfter(<Hello name="world" />, document.body);
Composing Components
Components can be reused and combined together.
import jsxElem, { render } from "jsx-standalone";
function Hello(props) {
return <h1>Hello {props.name}</h1>;
}
const CustomSeparator = props => (
<i>{[...Array(props.dots)].map(idx => ".")}</i>
);
function App() {
return (
<div>
<Hello name="foo" />
<CustomSeparator dots={50} />
<Hello name="bar" />
</div>
);
}
render(<App />, document.body);
Fragments
Fragments are supported as child elements everywhere, but are also supported as top-level JSX elements when using renderPrepend
, render
, and renderAppend
.
function Hello() {
return <>
<h1>Hello</h1>
<h1>world</h1>
</>;
}
function App() {
return <Hello />;
}
render(<App />, document.body);
Event
It's possible add events listeners to components as functions using camelCase notation (e.g. onClick)
For example:
function Hello(props) {
return <h1>Hello {props.name}</h1>;
}
function App() {
const clickHandler = function(e) {
alert("click function");
};
return (
<div>
<Hello onClick={() => alert("inline click function")} name="foo" />
<Hello onClick={clickHandler} name="bar" />
</div>
);
}
Embedding expressions in JSX
map()
function Hello(props) {
const names = props.names;
return (
<div>
{names.map(name => (
<h1>Hello {name}</h1>
))}
</div>
);
}
function App() {
return (
<div>
<Hello names={["foo", "bar"]} />
</div>
);
}
Inline If with Logical && Operator
function Hello(props) {
return <h1>Hello {props.name}</h1>;
}
function App() {
return (
<div>
{document.location.hostname === "localhost" && (
<h1>Welcome to localhost</h1>
)}
<Hello name="foo" />
<Hello name="bar" />
</div>
);
}
Calling a Function
function Hello(props) {
return <h1>Hello {props.name}</h1>;
}
const CustomSeparator = props => (
<i>{[...Array(props.dots)].map(idx => ".")}</i>
);
function App() {
return (
<div>
<Hello name="foo" />
<CustomSeparator dots={50} />
<Hello name="bar" />
{CustomSeparator({ dots: 10 })}
</div>
);
}
Style-Attribute
Object can be passed to the style
attribute with keys in camelCase.
import jsxElem, { render } from "jsx-standalone";
function Hello(props) {
return <h1>Hello {props.name}</h1>;
}
function App() {
return (
<div>
<Hello style={{ backgroundColor: "red" }} name="foo" />
<Hello style={{ backgroundColor: "blue", color: "white" }} name="bar" />
</div>
);
}
render(<App />, document.body);
Acknowledgement
This package was originally developed by Terry Kerr and extended by Bodo Tasche.