markdown-component-loader
v1.1.0
Published
Turn Markdown into dynamic, stateless React components
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Markdown Component Loader
Turn Markdown into dynamic, stateless React components
- Integrate documentation and other prose with user info and context
- Show your real UI components alongside documentation
- Add other dynamic components inside documentation
Usage
Installation
yarn add markdown-component-loader
~or~
npm install --save markdown-component-loader
You'll need both Babel and Webpack in order to use it.
Webpack Configuration
You then need to configure Webpack to use the loader, in your webpack.config.js
;
module.exports = {
module: {
loaders: [
{
test: /\.mdx$/i,
loader: 'babel-loader!markdown-component-loader'
},
{...more}
]
},
{...more}
};
Usage and Syntax
mdx
allows you interleave both React props and React components within your prose and code snippets! mdx
files may optionally start with yaml-formatted front-matter.
Front-matter accepts imports
, which will be included in the React component's definition. Other front-matter keys are added as static properties of the resultant Markdown component.
Here's an example of an mdx
file;
---
imports:
'{ name, version }': ./package.json
displayName: MarkdownComponentLoaderReadme
---
This is a _Markdown Component_ file. Here you can include JSX-style assignment expressions; this component was generated using version {{ version }} of {{ name }}!
Props passed to this component are available as `props`, so you can embed those too! Hello there, {{ props.who || 'world' }}!
Another cool thing you can do is use JSX **directly** - here’s an SVG element, used inline: <svg style={{ display: 'inline', height: '1em' }} viewBox="0 0 304 290"><path fill="none" stroke="currentColor" strokeWidth="16" d="M2,111 h300 l-242.7,176.3 92.7,-285.3 92.7,285.3 z" /></svg>.
Note: destructuring imports must be quoted, but others need not be.
The above mdx
file will produce the following module within Webpack;
import React from 'react';
import PropTypes from 'prop-types';
import { name, version } from './package.json';
MarkdownComponent.propTypes = {
className: PropTypes.string,
style: PropTypes.object
};
MarkdownComponent['displayName'] = 'MarkdownComponentLoaderReadme';
function MarkdownComponent(props) {
const {className, style} = props;
return (
<div className={className} style={style}>
<p>This is a <em>Markdown Component</em> file. Here you can include JSX-style assignment expressions; this component was generated using version { version } of { name }!</p>
<p>Props passed to this component are available as <code>props</code>, so you can embed those too! Hello there, { props.who || 'world' }!</p>
<p>Another cool thing you can do is use JSX <strong>directly</strong> - here’s an SVG element, used inline: <svg style={{ display: 'inline', height: '1em' }} viewBox="0 0 304 290"><path fill="none" stroke="currentColor" strokeWidth="16" d="M2,111 h300 l-242.7,176.3 92.7,-285.3 92.7,285.3 z" /></svg>.</p>
</div>
);
};
export default MarkdownComponent;
You can then include it anywhere you like in your own React code;
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import Readme from './readme.mdx';
ReactDOM.render(
<Readme who="you" />,
document.getElementById('main')
);
Extra Configuration
Markdown Component Loader accepts configuration of options via the Webpack configuration file.
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{...more},
{
test: /\.mdx$/i,
use: [
'babel-loader',
{
loader: 'markdown-component-loader',
options: {...options}
}
]
}
]
},
{...more}
};
Available Options
passElementProps
: Controls whether props can be passed from the parent to the generated elements. Defaults tofalse
.implicitlyImportReact
: Whether to include React and PropTypes in the imports automatically. If set tofalse
, you need to either supply React and PropTypes or import them explicitly. Defaults totrue
.markdownItPlugins
: An array of MarkdownIt plugins (and optionally their additional arguments) to use within the markdown renderer. These can be specified either as instances, or as paths as returned byrequire.resolve
.
MarkdownIt Plugins
If you supply an array of MarkdownIt plugins as markdownItPlugins
, Markdown Component Loader will chain them into the internal MarkdownIt renderer.
{
loader: 'markdown-component-loader',
options: {
markdownItPlugins: [
require('markdown-it-anchor'),
[require('markdown-it-table-of-contents'), { containerClass: 'my-container-class' }]
]
},
{...more}
}
The configuration above will supply both markdown-it-anchor
and markdown-it-table-of-contents
to MarkdownIt's use
method. markdown-it-table-of-contents
is supplied within an array, and the entire array is passed as the arguments to use
, allowing specifying plugin configurations.
Legacy Webpack compatibility
For compatibility with Webpack 1.x, where plugin configuration must be JSON compatible, plugins can be passed as path strings rather than the plugin object itself.
The equivalent of the example above in Webpack 1.x would be as follows.
module.exports = {
markdownComponentLoader: {
markdownItPlugins: [
require.resolve('markdown-it-anchor'),
[require.resolve('markdown-it-table-of-contents'), { containerClass: 'my-container-class' }]
]
},
{...more}
};
Styling and Interaction
Container Styling
The container will have supplied className
and style
props passed through to it.
Inner Element Styling
If passElementProps
is set to true
, elements within the Markdown Component can be styled on a per-element-name basis. You can set this in the webpack.config.js
(see the "Extra Configuration" section).
All generated standard elements (read: elements which are known to React.DOM
) will then have elementProps['name']
spread onto them (where name
is the tag name of the element). This option is intended to be used with Basscss modular CSS.
Here's the above example markdown document converted with this option;
import React from 'react';
import PropTypes from 'prop-types';
import { name, version } from './package.json';
MarkdownComponent.propTypes = {
className: PropTypes.string,
style: PropTypes.object,
elementProps: PropTypes.object
};
MarkdownComponent.defaultProps = {
elementProps: {}
};
MarkdownComponent['displayName'] = 'MarkdownComponentLoaderReadme';
function MarkdownComponent(props) {
const {className, style, elementProps} = props;
return (
<div className={className} style={style}>
<p {...elementProps['p']}>This is a <em {...elementProps['em']}>Markdown Component</em> file. Here you can include JSX-style assignment expressions; this component was generated using version { version } of { name }!</p>
<p {...elementProps['p']}>Props passed to this component are available as <code {...elementProps['code']}>props</code>, so you can embed those too! Hello there, { props.who || 'world' }!</p>
<p {...elementProps['p']}>Another cool thing you can do is use JSX <strong {...elementProps['strong']}>directly</strong> - here’s an SVG element, used inline: <svg style={{ display: 'inline', height: '1em' }} viewBox="0 0 304 290" {...elementProps['svg']}><path fill="none" stroke="currentColor" strokeWidth="16" d="M2,111 h300 l-242.7,176.3 92.7,-285.3 92.7,285.3 z" {...elementProps['path']} /></svg>.</p>
</div>
);
};
export default MarkdownComponent;
You can then specify any prop you want here, and that prop will be applied to all elements of that tag name.
For example, if you wanted to get a callback from each level-1 heading instance, you could use the component like this;
<SomeMarkdownComponent
elementProps={{
h1: {
onClick: (evt) => /* do something */
}
}}
/>
This also facilitates the Basscss style, allowing, for instance, styling of anchor tags like so;
<SomeMarkdownComponent
elementProps={{
a: {
className: 'blue hover-navy text-decoration-none hover-underline'
}
}}
/>
Prior Art
react-markdown-loader by Javier Cubides allows use of React components within fenced code blocks (albeit not assignment expressions), and gave me the idea to use yaml front-matter for imports. Thanks! 😁