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react-cimpress-comment

v2.5.0

Published

Visualizes comment(s) for a particular platform resource

Downloads

274

Readme

react-cimpress-comment Build Status NPM version

This repository stores a react component that anyone can use to conveniently collect and display comments related to platform resources.

Usage

Install the npm package

npm install react-cimpress-comment --save

import the component

import { Comments } from 'react-cimpress-comment'

add the css dependencies

<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://static.ux.cimpress.io/mcp-ux-css/1.1/release/css/mcp-ux-css.min.css"/>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="//cloud.typography.com/7971714/6011752/css/fonts.css"/>

and then use wherever needed

render() {

    return (
      <div>
        <Comments resourceUri={"https://some_resource_server.cimpress.io/v0/resource/resourceId"}
                  newestFirst={false} editComments={true} accessToken={"accessToken"}/>
      </div>
    );
  }

There is also a variant of the component that places the comments in a drawer, and provides a button with comment count as a badge that opens the drawer.

import { CommentsDrawerLink } from 'react-cimpress-comment'

render() {

    return (
      <div>
        <CommentsDrawerLink resourceUri={"https://some_resource_server.cimpress.io/v0/resource/resourceId"}
                  newestFirst={false} editComments={true} accessToken={"accessToken"} />
      </div>
    );
  }

Optional props:

  • header allows overwriting the header/title part
  • footer allows overwriting the footer part
  • position, by default "right". Can also move the drawer to the "left" side.

Publishing a new version to NPM

New patch version: $ npm version patch [ && npm publish ] // minor changes

New minor version: $ npm version minor [ && npm publish ] // backwards compatible

New major version: $ npm version major [ && npm publish ] // breaking changes

Publish a module: $ npm publish

Note: The way we publish new versions is by using the command line tools.

Development

Make sure you have the up-to-date translation files by calling

CLIENT_ID="<here the client id>" CLIENT_SECRET="<here the client secret>" npm run translate

For developing you can use storybook

npm run start

This will run an instance of Storybook integrated with Auth0 and providing the components in this package in environment as close as possible to production. It is useful to manually play with the components and validate if the features you are working on are as you'd like them to be from UX point of view.

In some case, modelling a special condition is hard without mocking. The package also provides an alternative and isolated Storybook environment where all external dependencies are mocked. This is extremely useful to validate a certain behavior in particular situation.

npm run storybook

This command will run the Storybook in the background. You can later stop it by running npm run storybookstop.

During and after development it is good to check or update BackstopJS data. Running the UI tests is done by backstop test after executing npm run storybook.

Note: Make sure you have backstop installed npm install -g backstopjs or use the one in node_modules.

To approve the changes to reference images run node_modules/.bin/backstop approve on the results branch and make sure to merge the reference images back to the respective branch `