A Webpack loader allowing imports of HTML components as if they were React pure functional components.
./click-me-view.jsx.html
<template default>
<button use-props="{{ props.buttonProps }}">
Clicked {{ props.clicks }} time(s)
</button>
</template>
./click-me-container.jsx
import React, { Component } from 'react';
// Import the HTML component as if it was a React component.
import ClickMeView from './click-me-view';
export default class ClickMeContainer extends Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = { clicks: 0 };
this.buttonProps = { onMouseDown: this.handleMouseDown.bind(this) };
}
handleMouseDown(e) {
e.preventDefault();
this.setState({ clicks: this.state.clicks + 1 });
}
render() {
return (
<ClickMeView
buttonProps={ this.buttonProps }
clicks={ this.state.clicks }
/>
);
}
}
Add the react-pure-html-component-loader to your webpack.config.js:
{
module: {
loaders: [
{
test: /\.jsx\.html$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
loader: 'babel!react-pure-html-component'
}
]
},
resolve: {
extensions: [ '.jsx', '.jsx.html' ]
}
}
- Default and named imports/exports,
- Multiple component definitions in the same file,
- Explicit conditional and loop rendering,
- Props spreading,
- CSS modules.
npm install --save-dev react-pure-html-component-loader
React provides a great developing experience, you finally have a strong integration between the JavaScript code and the template syntax, it feels natural to write.
But this merge isn't that good for designers who just know enough HTML and, depending on the requirements, it can be a disqualifying criteria for React.
Thanks to the pure functional components and the Presentational and Container pattern, most components are simply templates having data as input and some UI as output. What if those pure functional components could simply be written in HTML to be easily created and modified by designers?
The purpose of this Webpack loader is to convert HTML components to React pure functional component.
react-pure-html-component-loader reconcile developers and designers. It is a Webpack loader compiling HTML components into pure functional React components.
Some demos can be found under the demo/
folder, to launch one type in a
console:
npm run demo -- <demo-path>
For example:
npm run demo -- demo/todo-list
Import the default component of a file.
Usage
<link rel="import" href id />
Attributes
rel
: Must be set toimport
for this kind of relation,href
: Path of the file to import,id
: Name to use to reference the default component of the file.
Example
<link rel="import" href="path/to/component" id="my-component" />
Is equivalent in ES2015 to:
import MyComponent from 'path/to/component';
Import a component by its name. The <link>
tag for a named import must be
child of another <link>
tag having a href
attribute.
Usage
<link rel="import" href>
<link rel="import" [name] id />
</link>
Attributes
rel
: Must be set toimport
for this kind of relation,href
: Path of the file to import,name
(Optional): Name of the component to import, can be omitted if it is the same asid
,id
: Name to use to reference the component.
Example
<link rel="import" href="path/to/component">
<link rel="import" id="component-one" />
<link rel="import" name="component-two" id="component-alias" />
</link>
Is equivalent in ES2015 to:
import {
ComponentOne,
ComponentTwo as ComponentAlias
} from 'path/to/component';
Import the default and some named components from the same file.
Usage
<link rel="import" href id>
<link rel="import" [name] id />
</link>
Attributes
- See default imports and named imports.
Example
<link rel="import" href="path/to/component" id="my-component">
<link rel="import" id="component-one" />
<link rel="import" name="component-two" id="component-alias" />
</link>
Is equivalent in ES2015 to:
import MyComponent, {
ComponentOne,
ComponentTwo as ComponentAlias
} from 'path/to/component';
Import a global stylesheet.
Usage
<link rel="stylesheet" href />
Attributes
rel
: Must be set tostylesheet
for this kind of relation,href
: Path of the file to import.
Example
<link rel="stylesheet" href="./global-style" />
Is equivalent in ES2015 to:
import './global-style';
Import a stylesheet and name it.
Usage
<link rel="stylesheet" href id />
Attributes
rel
: Must be set tostylesheet
for this kind of relation,href
: Path of the file to import,id
: Value to use to reference the stylesheet.
Example
<link rel="stylesheet" href="./style" id="{{ style }}" />
Is equivalent in ES2015 to:
import style from './style';
It can be used this way:
<div class="{{ style.myClassName }}" />
A component is the content of an HTML tag <template>
. It can only have a
single child.
Each file must contain at most one default component. A default component is the main component of the file.
Usage
<template default [id]>
<!-- Content -->
</template>
Attributes
default
: Flag the component as default,id
(Optional): Tag name to use to reference this component. Also used to set thedisplayName
of the component for debug purpose.
Example
<template default id="hello-world">
<div>Hello World</div>
</template>
Is equivalent in React to:
export default function HelloWorld() {
return (
<div>Hello World</div>
);
}
HelloWorld.displayName = 'HelloWorld';
A named component is simply a <template>
tag with an id
attribute, which
means it can be used by referencing its name. All named components will be
exported under their given name.
Usage
<template id>
<!-- Content -->
</template>
Attributes
id
: Tag name to use to reference this component. Also used to set thedisplayName
of the component for debug purpose.
Example
<template id="named-component">
<!-- ... -->
</template>
<template default>
<!-- ... -->
<named-component />
<!-- ... -->
</template>
Is equivalent in React to:
export function NamedComponent(props) {
return (
// ...
);
}
NamedComponent.displayName = 'NamedComponent';
export default function(props) {
return (
// ...
<NamedComponent />
// ...
);
}
A loop will render its content for each element in the array. The render
tag
can only have one child. When looping over an array, a key
attribute must be
set on each child tag.
Usage
<render for-each as>
<!-- Content -->
</render>
Attributes
for-each
: Array of data,as
: Name of the variable to use for each element.
Example
<template default>
<div class="users">
<render for-each="{{ props.users }}" as="{{ user }}">
<div key="{{ user.id }}">{{ user.name }}</div>
</render>
</div>
</template>
Is equivalent in React to:
export default function(props) {
return (
<div className="users">
{ props.users.map(user => (
<div key={ user.id }>
{ user.name }
</div>
)) }
</div>
);
}
A conditional will render its content depending on a condition. The render
tag
can only have one child.
Usage
<render if>
<!-- Content -->
</render>
Attributes
if
: Condition to fulfill for the content to be rendered.
Example
<template default>
<div class="user">
<render if="{{ props.user }}">
<div>{{ props.user.name }}</div>
</render>
</div>
</template>
Is equivalent in React to:
export default function(props) {
return (
<div className="user">
{ props.user && <div>{ props.user.name }</div> }
</div>
);
}
Props spreading is used to simplify the component so the focus can be kept on the UI.
Usage
<any-tag use-props>
<!-- Content -->
</any-tag>
Attributes
use-props
: Variable that will be spread in the corresponding tag.
Example
Instead of writing:
<template default>
<button
on-mouse-down="{{ props.handleMouseDown }}"
on-key-down="{{ props.handleKeyDown }}"
on-focus="{{ props.handleFocus }}"
on-blur="{{ props.handleBlur }}"
>
Clicked {{ props.clicks }} time(s)
</button>
</template>
Just write:
<template default>
<button use-props="{{ props.buttonProps }}">
Clicked {{ props.clicks }} time(s)
</button>
</template>
Which is equivalent in React to:
export default function(props) {
return (
<button { ...props.buttonProps }>
Clicked { props.clicks } time(s)
</button>
);
}
The conversion from HTML attributes to JSX can be found in this mapping file.
MIT.