react-from-json v0.8.0
react-from-json
Declare your React component tree in JSON
Intro
react-from-json lets you render React
<Foo>
<Bar baz="Hello, world" />
</Foo>from JSON
{
"type": "Foo",
"props": {
"children": {
"type": "Bar",
"props": {
"baz": "Hello, world"
}
}
}
}It also supports non-recursive structures.
Install
npm install --save react-from-jsonUsage
import React from "react";
import ReactFromJSON from "react-from-json";
const entry = {
type: "Foo",
props: {
children: {
type: "Bar",
props: {
baz: "Hello, world",
},
},
},
};
const mapping = {
Foo: ({ children }) => (
<div>
<div>{children}</div>
</div>
),
Bar: ({ baz }) => <span>{baz}</span>,
};
const Example = () => {
return <ReactFromJSON entry={entry} mapping={mapping} />;
};Props passed to your components
Props passed to your mapped components include
propKey- name of the prop that rendered your componentpropIndex- index of your component if using flat trees_type- thetypevalue for your component...props- the resolved value of yourpropsobject, with relevant child nodes rendered as components
Other JSON shapes
If your data doesn't follow the type | props shape, react-from-json makes it easy to map your data on the fly using the mapProp prop.
import React from "react";
import ReactFromJSON from "react-from-json";
import mapping from "./mapping";
const entryWithDifferentShape = {
_type: "Foo",
children: {
_type: "Bar",
baz: "Hello, world",
},
};
const mapProp = (prop) => {
if (prop._type) {
const { _type, ...props } = prop;
return {
type: _type,
props,
};
}
return prop;
};
const Example = () => {
return (
<ReactFromJSON
entry={entryWithDifferentShape}
mapping={mapping}
mapProp={mapProp}
/>
);
};Flat trees
react-from-json also supports flat, non-recursive structures via the special <ComponentLookup /> component. This is useful when working with typed systems like GraphQL, and you need to avoid unions.
The <ComponentLookup /> component
<ComponentLookup /> simply maps to another component defined in a components object. If you were using it in React, you would use it like:
<ComponentLookup componentType="Button" componentIndex={0} />which would look up the Button component at index 0 in the components object, resolving to:
<Button id={0}>Hello, World!</Button>For react-from-json we use JSON, so we would write this:
{
"type": "ComponentLookup",
"props": {
"componentType": "Button",
"componentIndex": 0
}
}The
idhere is set by thecomponentIndex, since we didn't specify one in the JSON. See this comment on IDs for more information.
Example
Here's the same example as above, instead using a <ComponentLookup /> for entry.props.baz, and providing a separate components object.
import React from "react";
import ReactFromJSON from "react-from-json";
const entry = {
type: "Foo",
props: {
baz: {
type: "ComponentLookup",
props: {
componentIndex: 0,
componentType: "Bar",
},
},
},
};
const mapping = {
Foo: ({ baz }) => (
<div>
<div>{baz}</div>
</div>
),
Bar: ({ baz }) => <span>{baz}</span>,
};
const components = {
Bar: [
{
type: "Bar",
props: {
baz: "Hello, world",
},
},
],
};
const Example = () => {
return (
<ReactFromJSON entry={entry} mapping={mapping} components={components} />
);
};A note on ids
react-from-json will map id from the root of your component JSON to the React component's id prop. Likewise, if you specify id under props, it will use this. If you use the <ComponentLookup /> component, react-from-json will use the array index as id unless another id is specified. Your id will always take priority.
With TypeScript
react-from-json supports generic types for use with TypeScript.
import { entry, mapping, components } from "./aboveExample";
import ReactFromJSON from "react-from-json";
interface Components {
Bar: object[];
}
interface Mapping {
Foo: React.ReactNode;
Bar: React.ReactNode;
}
class FooReactFromJSON extends ReactFromJSON<Mapping, Components> {
render(): JSX.Element {
return super.render();
}
}
const Example = () => {
return (
<FooReactFromJSON entry={entry} mapping={mapping} components={components} />
);
};License
MIT © Measured Corporation Ltd