Document & develop React components without breaking a sweat
npm install -g reunify
- Zero-config
- No plugins
- Components over configuration
- Automatic file system based routing
- Completely customizable
- Export static sites
- Works as an isolated development environment
reunify renders a directory of React components, automatically handling routing based on filename.
Create a docs
folder and add an index.js
file.
// index.js
import React from 'react';
export default class extends React.Component {
render() {
return <h1>Hello</h1>;
}
}
Start a development server by running:
reunify docs --open
To add more pages, add a new component for each route. For example, create an about page:
// about.js
import React from 'react';
export default props => <h1>About</h1>;
The about page should now render when navigating to http://localhost:8080/about.
reunify docs
Options:
-o --open Open dev server in default browser
-p --port Custom port for dev server
-t --template Path to custom HTML template
--webpack Path to custom webpack configuration
reunify docs -op 8080
Export static HTML and client-side bundle
reunify export docs
Export static HTML without bundle
reunify export docs --static
Options
-d --out-dir Output directory (default dist)
-s --static Output static HTML without JS bundle
-t --template Path to custom HTML template
--webpack Path to custom webpack configuration
Use the async getInitialProps
static method to fetch data for static rendering.
This method was inspired by Next.js.
const Index = props => <h1>Hello {props.data}</h1>;
Index.getInitialProps = async () => {
const fetch = require('isomorphic-fetch');
const res = await fetch('http://example.com/data');
const data = await res.json();
return {data};
};
A custom App
component can be provided by including an _app.js
file.
The App
component uses the render props pattern to provide additional state and props to its child routes.
// example _app.js
import React from 'react';
export default class extends React.Component {
state = {
count: 0
};
update = fn => this.setState(fn);
render() {
const {render, routes} = this.props;
return render({
...this.state,
decrement: () => this.update(s => ({count: s.count - 1})),
increment: () => this.update(s => ({count: s.count + 1}))
});
}
}
The App
component can also be used to provide a common layout for all routes.
// example _app.js
import React from 'react';
import Nav from '../components/Nav';
import Header from '../components/Header';
import Footer from '../components/Footer';
export default class extends React.Component {
render() {
const {render, routes} = this.props;
const route = routes.find(route => route.path === props.location.pathname);
return (
<React.Fragment>
<Nav />
<Header route={route} />
{render()}
<Footer />
</React.Fragment>
);
}
}
reunify supports server-side rendering for [styled-components][sc] and [emotion][emotion] with zero configuration.
To enable CSS rendering for static export, ensure that styled-components
is installed as a dependency in your package.json
"dependencies": {
"styled-components": "^3.2.6"
}
Ensure emotion
is installed as a dependency in your package.json
"dependencies": {
"emotion": "^9.1.3"
}
Default options can be set in the reunify
field in package.json
.
"reunify": {
"static": true,
"outDir": "site",
"title": "Hello",
}
Head elements such as <title>
, <meta>
, and <style>
can be configured with the reunify
field in package.json
.
"reunify": {
"title": "My Site",
"meta": [
{ "name": "twitter:card", "content": "summary" }
{ "name": "twitter:image", "content": "kitten.png" }
],
"links": [
{
"rel": "stylesheet",
"href": "https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Roboto"
}
]
}
A custom HTML template can be passed as the template
option.
"reunify": {
"template": "./html.js"
}
// example template
module.exports = ({html, css, scripts, title, meta = [], links = [], static: isStatic}) => `<!DOCTYPE html>
<head>
<title>{title}</title>
${css}
</head>
<div id=root>${html}</div>
${scripts}
`;
reunify creates routes based on the file system, using react-router.
To set the base URL for static build and export, use the basename
option.
"reunify": {
"basename": "/my-site"
}
To link between different components, install react-router-dom
and use the Link
component.
npm i react-router-dom
import React from 'react';
import {Link} from 'react-router-dom';
export default () => (
<div>
<h1>Home</h1>
<nav>
<Link to="/">Home</Link>
<Link to="/about">About</Link>
</nav>
</div>
);
Reunify includes support for the JSX file format.
---
title: Hello
---
import { Box, Heading } from 'rebass'
<Box px={2} py={4}>
<Heading>
{frontMatter.title}
</Heading>
</Box>
Webpack configuration files named webpack.config.js
will automatically be merged with the built-in configuration, using webpack-merge.
To use a custom filename, pass the file path to the --webpack
flag.
// webpack.config.js example
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [{test: /\.txt$/, loader: 'raw-loader'}]
}
};
See the example.
- React Router
- Mini HTML Webpack Plugin
- [Styled Components][sc]
- webpack
- Create React App
- Next.js
- Gatsby
- React-Static