A babel plugin that provides some directives for react(any JSX), similar to directives of vue. And you can now try it online at playground.
Requires node v10.0.0 or higher, babel v7.0.0 or higher.
use npm:
npm install --save-dev babel-plugin-react-directives
npm install --save react-directives-runtime
use yarn:
yarn add --dev babel-plugin-react-directives
yarn add react-directives-runtime
{
"plugins": [
"react-directives"
]
}
{
"plugins": [
[
"react-directives",
{
"prefix": "x"
}
]
]
}
prefix
: JSX props prefix for directives. Default: "x", example usage:x-if
If the x-if
value is truthy, this element will be rendered, otherwise do not.
Example:
const foo = <div x-if={true}>text</div>
Convert to:
const foo = true ? <div>text</div> : null
The x-else-if
must have a corresponding x-if
. if x-if
value is falsy, and x-else-if
value is truthy, it will be rendered.
The x-else
must have the corresponding x-if
or x-if-else
. When all corresponding x-if
or x-else-if
value are falsy, it will be rendered.
Example:
const foo = (
<div>
<p x-if={data === 'a'}>A</p>
<p x-else-if={data === 'b'}>B</p>
<p x-else-if={data === 'c'}>C</p>
<p x-else>D</p>
</div>
)
Convert to:
const foo = (
<div>
{data === 'a'
? <p>A</p>
: data === 'b'
? <p>B</p>
: data === 'c'
? <p>C</p>
: <p>D</p>
}
</div>
)
The x-show
controls the display or hiding of elements through the display
of the style
prop. If the x-show
value is falsy, will set style.display = "none"
, otherwise do nothing.
Example:
const foo = <div x-show={true}>text</div>
Convert to:
const foo = (
<div style={{
display: true ? undefined : "none"
}}>text
</div>
)
Of course, it will also merge other style
props by calling the mergeProps method, for example:
const foo = (
<div
style={{ color: 'red' }}
x-show={true}
{...extraProps}>
text
</div>
)
will be converted to:
const foo = (
<div
{...extraProps}
style={{
...mergeProps.call(this, "style", [
{ style: { color: 'red' } },
extraProps
]),
display: true ? undefined : "none"
}}>text
</div>
)
The x-for
is used to traverse arrays to generate elements.
The value should like: (item, index) in list
list
: array for traversalitem
: current valueindex
: current index (optional)
Note: If you use ESLint, you may receive an error that item
and index
are undeclared variables.
Please install eslint-plugin-react-directives plugin to solve it.
Example:
const foo = (
<ul>
<li
x-for={item in list}
key={item.id}>{item.name}
</li>
</ul>
)
Convert to:
const foo = (
<ul>
{list.map(item => (
<li key={item.id}>{item.name}</li>
))}
</ul>
)
Also note that if used with x-if
, the x-for
has a higher priority, for example:
const foo = (
<ul>
<li
x-for={item in list}
x-if={item.name === 'alice'}
key={item.id}>{item.name}
</li>
</ul>
)
will be converted to:
const foo = (
<ul>
{list.map(item => (
item.name === 'alice'
? <li key={item.id}>{item.name}</li>
: null
))}
</ul>
)
The x-class
for conditionally joining classNames together by classnames, and it is useful for dynamically generating className.
Usage is the same as classnames, the binding value will be passed as a parameter to the classNames
method.
Example:
const foo = <div x-class={{ abc: true, def: false }}>
Convert to:
const foo = <div className={classNames({ abc: true, def: false })}>
// className="abc"
Note: classNames
method references runtime/classnames.js.
Of course, it will also merge other className
props, for example:
const foo = <div x-class={{ abc: true, def: false }} className="xyz">
will be converted to:
const foo = <div className={classNames(["xyz", { abc: true, def: false }])}>
// className="xyz abc"
The x-class
can also be used with css-modules, the usage is as follows:
import styles from './style.css';
const foo = (
<div
className={styles.foo}
x-class={{
[styles.bar]: true,
[styles.qux]: false
}}
/>
)
- When using
x-for
in Typescript, the binding valueitem
will report an error. The temporary solution is to declare theitem
variable before use. Such asdeclare let item: any
. And it is not recommended to usex-for
in Typescript.
See more information at: CHANGELOG