With react-overridable
you can mark your React components as overridable
and allow other apps to customize them. This can be useful when creating
libraries with a default implementation of components which requires to be
overridden at runtime.
You can inject new props, override render elements or the component itself.
Create a React component and mark it as overridable:
import PropTypes from 'prop-types';
import React, {Component} from 'react';
import Overridable, {parametrize, OverridableContext} from 'react-overridable';
class TitleComponent extends Component {
static propTypes = {
title: PropTypes.string.isRequired,
children: PropTypes.oneOfType([PropTypes.node, PropTypes.func]),
};
static defaultProps = {
children: null,
};
render() {
const {title, children} = this.props;
return (
<Overridable id="TitleComponent.container" title={title}>
<>
<div>{title}</div>
{children}
</>
</Overridable>
);
}
}
export const OverridableExampleComponent = Overridable.component('TitleComponent', TitleComponent);
In this example, the TitleComponent
is marked as overridable inside the
render
function, via the React component <Overridable />
and then exported
via the Higher-Order component Overridable.component
.
Each overridable component is identified by a unique id.
After marking components as overridable, there are 3 ways that you can use to override:
- Provide new props with
parametrize
: define new props to override the default component props.
const parametrized = parametrize(OverridableExampleComponent, {
title: 'My new title',
});
// create a map {<component id>: <parametrized props>}
const overriddenComponents = {TitleComponent: parametrized};
- Provide new render elements: override the default rendered elements for the marked sections. Props are passed and can be used in the new template.
const overriddenRenderElement = ({title}) => (
<h1>{title}</h1>
);
// create a map {<render element id>: <new render elements>}
const overriddenComponents = {TitleComponent.container: overriddenRenderElement};
- Provide a new component: you can replace the existing component with a new one.
const NewComponent = () => <strong>This is a new title</strong>;
// create a map {<component id>: <new component>}
const overriddenComponents = {TitleComponent: NewComponent};
In your app, inject the map of ids-components in the React Context
OverridableContext
so that the react-overridable
library can
use it and replace components when the default are rendered:
class App extends Component {
render() {
return (
<OverridableContext.Provider value={overriddenComponents}>
<....>
</OverridableContext.Provider>
)
}
}
To install the library, you will have to install the peer dependencies.
npm i react-overridable
npm i <peer dependencies>
To run tests:
npm run test
To build the library:
npm run build
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