2.1.1 • Published 11 months ago

@onlook/babel-plugin-react v2.1.1

Weekly downloads
-
License
Apache-2.0
Repository
-
Last release
11 months ago

Onlook React Babel preprocessor

Usage

  1. Install preprocessor library
npm i --save-dev @onlook/babel-plugin-react
  1. Add the onlook preprocessor

If it doesn't exists, create a .babelrc file and add the onlook preprocessor.

{
  "plugins": ["@onlook/react"]
}

Using with Webpack

For base Webpack project, use babel-loader in order to use the Babel plugin

  1. Install babel-loader and the plugin
npm install -D babel-loader @babel/core @babel/preset-env webpack @onlook/babel-plugin-react
  1. Add babel-loader rule in webpack.config.js
module: {
  rules: [
    {
      test: /\.(?:js|mjs|cjs|ts|tsx|jsx)$/,
      exclude: /node_modules/,
      use: {
        loader: 'babel-loader',
        options: {
          presets: [
            ['@babel/preset-env', { targets: "defaults" }]
          ]
        }
      }
    }
  ]
}
  1. Add the onlook babel plugin

If it doesn't exists, create a .babelrc file and add the onlook plugin.

{
  "plugins": ["@onlook/react"]
}
  1. Run the project normally

Using with Create react app

To use with Create React App, access to webpack configuration is required to add the preprocessor. This requires either ejecting the app or using react-app-rewired.

Using react-app-rewired

  1. Install dependencies
npm install react-app-rewired customize-cra @onlook/babel-plugin-react --save-dev
  1. Modify the package.json scripts

In your package.json, replace react-scripts with react-app-rewired in the start, build, and test scripts.

"scripts": {
  "start": "react-app-rewired start",
  "build": "react-app-rewired build",
  "test": "react-app-rewired test",
  "eject": "react-scripts eject"
},
  1. Create a config-overrides.js file

In the root of your project, create a file named config-overrides.js with the following content.

const { override, addBabelPlugins } = require('customize-cra');

module.exports = override(
  ...addBabelPlugins(
    '@onlook/react'
  )
);

Ejecting create-react-app

Alternatively, you can eject create-react-app. This exposes the internals of how create-react-app works which allows us to use the preprocessor.

WARNING: This cannot be reversed! Before ejecting, it's highly recommended to commit your current changes to version control. This way, you have a point to revert back to in case something goes wrong during the eject process.

  1. Run the Eject Command

In your project directory, run the following command:

npm run eject

You'll notice that the config and scripts folders have been added to your project directory. These folders contain all the configuration files and scripts that were previously managed by CRA, including webpack, Babel, ESLint, etc.

  1. Add the onlook preprocessor

If it doesn't exists, create a .babelrc file and add the onlook preprocessor.

{
  "plugins": ["@onlook/react"]
}
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