accelerator

0.2.0 • Public • Published

Accelerator

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A React view engine for Express which supports client-side mounting.

Installing

npm install accelerator

Adding Accelerator to your app

In your main app file, add the following:

// app.js
 
var app = express();
 
app.set('views', __dirname + '/views');
app.set('view engine', 'jsx');
app.engine('jsx', require('accelerator').createEngine());

Rendering a view

Here is a simple example of a route returning an Accelerator view

// app.js
 
app.get('/', function(req, res) {
   res.render('homepage', {props: {name: 'Andrew'}});
});

When we render a view using Accelerator, the actual properties which will be passed to our React element are stored in the props key of our options object.

Here's what homepage.jsx looks like.

// views/homepage.jsx
 
var React = require('react')
 
module.exports = React.createClass({
   render: function() {
      return (
         <div>
            <h1>Hello {this.props.name}</h1>
         </div>
      );
   }
});

Here's what the resulting HTML will look like:

<html>
   <body>
      <div id="content">
         <div data-reactid=".hi3kxtgbnk" data-react-checksum="-480494251">
            <h1 data-reactid=".hi3kxtgbnk.0">What the Code</h1>
         </div>
      </div>
      <script>var APP_PROPS = {"name": "Andrew"};</script> 
   </body>
</html>

So what did Accelerator do? When you pass a view to the render() function Accelerator will require that file and render whatever React class is exported to non-static markup. This means that the react-id and data-react-checksum fields will be preserved (they're necessary for mounting on the client later). The resulting element will then be mounted on a <div> with the id "content." You will also notice that your props are nicely added there at the bottom so that you can more easily mount cleanly on the client. Here's what your client mounting will look like:

// client.js
 
React.render(React.createElement(Homepage, APP_PROPS), document.getElementById("content"))

Note: This assumes that you've used Browserify to package up your export from homepage.jsx above. The details of how to do this aren't covered here. See the Browserify documentation.

Another note: The clever observer may notice that our example page has no <head> element and also doesn't include client.js anywhere. I know it is wrong, but don't worry, we'll get to that in a minute.

Why mount to "content" and not directly to the <body>? There's a few reasons.

  1. React doesn't like mounting directly to the body, you'll see it complain if you try.
  2. Also, notice that nifty little <script> element with your initial props in it at the bottom there? That can't be there if you mount directly to the <body>, otherwise the checksum would fail when you try to mount.
  3. Lastly, this allows us to inject other static markup at the bottom of the <body> without failing the checksum.

The head and post properties

You'll notice that our above example is lacking a <head> element. Don't worry, Accelerator will handle that. Let's expand a bit on our example.

// app.js
 
app.get('/', function(req, res) {
   res.render('homepage', {
      props: {name: 'Andrew'},
      head: require('./views/head.jsx'),
      head_props: {title: 'My Homepage'},
      post: require('./views/post.jsx'),
      post_props: {src: '/js/client.js'} 
   });
});

Well that is certainly different. Let's take a look at these bad boys.

// head.jsx
 
var React = require('react');
 
module.exports = React.createClass({
   render: function() {
      return (
         <head>
            <title>{this.props.title}</title>
            <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/css/base.css" />
         </head>
   )}
});
// post.jsx
 
var React = require('react');
 
module.exports = React.createClass({
   render: function() {
      return (
         <div>
            <script src="http://fb.me/react-0.13.3.js"></script>
            <script src={this.props.src}></script>
         </div>
   )}
});

Accelerator renders both the head and post parameters to static markup and inserts them above and below your the <div id="content"> element, respectively. As you have likely guessed, head_props and post_props get passed as props when the elements are rendered.

So now what does our HTML look like?

<html>
   <head>
      <title>My Homepage</title>
      <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/css/base.css" />
   </head>
   <body>
      <div id="content">
         <div data-reactid=".hi3kxtgbnk" data-react-checksum="-480494251">
            <h1 data-reactid=".hi3kxtgbnk.0">What the Code</h1>
         </div>
      </div>
      <script>var APP_PROPS = {"name": "Andrew"};</script> 
      <div>
         <script src="http://fb.me/react-0.13.3.js"></script> 
         <script src="/js/client.js"></script> 
      </div>
   </body>
</html>

And there you have it.

TL;DR

Render a view like this:

app.get('/', function(req, res) {
   res.render('homepage', {
      props: {name: 'Andrew'},
      head: require('./views/head.jsx'),
      head_props: {title: 'My Homepage'},
      post: require('./views/post.jsx'),
      post_props: {src: '/js/client.js'}
   });
});

And Accelerator will use it to generate a page based on this:

<html>
   <head_elem />
   <body>
      <div id="content">
         <view_elem />
      </div>
      <script>var APP_PROPS=view_props;</script> 
      <post_elem />
   </body>
</html>

Get it? Got it? Good. Don't get it? Feel free to submit an issue!

Why not express-react-views?

The maintainers of the express-react-views project have explicitly stated that they have no intent to supoort client-side mounting and reject any contributions which try to add this functionality.

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Install

npm i accelerator

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Version

0.2.0

License

MIT

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  • andrewguenther