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@bem-react/di
Advanced tools
Dependency Injection (DI) allows you to split React components into separate versions and comfortably switch them in the project whenever needed, e.g., to make a specific bundle.
DI package helps to solve similar tasks with minimum effort:
npm i @bem-react/di -S
Note! This example uses ClassName package.
E.g., for a structure like this:
Components/
Header/
Header@desktop.tsx
Header@mobile.tsx
Footer/
Footer@desktop.tsx
Footer@mobile.tsx
App.tsx
First, create two files that define two versions of the App and use different sets of components: App@desktop.tsx
and App@mobile.tsx
. Put them near App.tsx
.
In each App version (App@desktop.tsx
and App@mobile.tsx
) we should define which components should be used.
Three steps to do this:
const registry = new Registry({ id: cnApp() });
registry.set(cnHeader(), Header);
registry.set(cnFooter(), Footer);
export const AppNewVersion = withRegistry(registry)(AppCommon);
The files should look like this:
1. In App@desktop.tsx
import { cn } from '@bem-react/classname';
import { Registry, withRegistry } from '@bem-react/di';
import { App as AppCommon } from './App';
import { Footer } from './Components/Footer/Footer@desktop';
import { Header } from './Components/Header/Header@desktop';
const cnApp = cn('App');
const cnHeader = cn('Header');
const cnFooter = cn('Footer');
const registry = new Registry({ id: cnApp() });
registry.set(cnHeader(), Header);
registry.set(cnFooter(), Footer);
export const AppDesktop = withRegistry(registry)(AppCommon);
2. In App@mobile.tsx
import { cn } from '@bem-react/classname';
import { Registry, withRegistry } from '@bem-react/di';
import { App as AppCommon } from './App';
import { Footer } from './Components/Footer/Footer@mobile';
import { Header } from './Components/Header/Header@mobile';
const cnApp = cn('App');
const cnHeader = cn('Header');
const cnFooter = cn('Footer');
const registry = new Registry({ id: cnApp() });
registry.set(cnHeader(), Header);
registry.set(cnFooter(), Footer);
export const AppMobile = withRegistry(registry)(AppCommon);
Time to use these versions in your app dynamically!
If in App.tsx
your dependencies were static before
import { cn } from '@bem-react/classname';
import { Header } from './Components/Header/Header';
import { Footer } from './Components/Footer/Footer';
const cnPage = cn('Page');
export const App: React.SFC = () => (
<div className={ cnPage() }>
<Header />
<Content />
<Footer />
</div>
);
Now the dependencies can be injected based on the currently used registry
import { cn } from '@bem-react/classname';
import { RegistryConsumer } from '@bem-react/di';
// No Header or Footer imports
const cnApp = cn('App');
const cnPage = cn('Page');
const cnHeader = cn('Header');
const cnFooter = cn('Footer');
export const App: React.SFC = () => (
<RegistryConsumer>
{registries => {
// Get registry with components
const registry = registries[cnApp()];
// Get the needed version of the component based on registry
const Header = registry.get(cnHeader());
const Footer = registry.get(cnFooter());
return(
<div className={ cnPage() }>
<Header />
<Content />
<Footer />
</div>
);
}}
</RegistryConsumer>
);
export default App;
So you could use different versions of your app e.g. for conditional rendering on your server side or to create separate bundles
import { AppDesktop } from './path-to/App@desktop';
import { AppMobile } from './path-to/App@mobile';
FAQs
BEM React Dependency Injection
The npm package @bem-react/di receives a total of 95 weekly downloads. As such, @bem-react/di popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @bem-react/di demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 7 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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