Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

@bem-react/di

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
6
Versions
45
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

@bem-react/di

BEM React Dependency Injection

  • 2.2.6
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
104
decreased by-39.18%
Maintainers
6
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

@bem-react/di · npm (scoped) npm bundle size (minified + gzip)

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:

  • decouple desktop and mobile versions of a component
  • implement an experimental version of a component alongside the common one

Install

npm i -S @bem-react/di

Quick start

Note! This example uses @bem-react/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:

  1. Create a registry with a particular id:
const registry = new Registry({ id: cnApp() })
  1. Register all the needed components versions under a descriptive key (keys, describing similar components, should be the same across all the versions):
registry.set('Header', Header)
registry.set('Footer', Footer)

or

registry.fill({
  Header,
  Footer,
})

or

registry.fill({
  'id-1': Header,
  'id-2': Footer,
})
  1. Export the App version with its registry of components:
export const AppNewVersion = withRegistry(registry)(AppCommon)

The files should look like this:

1. In App.tsx

import { cn } from '@bem-react/classname'

export const cnApp = cn('App')
export const registryId = cnApp()

2. In App@desktop.tsx

import { Registry, withRegistry } from '@bem-react/di'
import { App as AppCommon, registryId } from './App'

import { Footer } from './Components/Footer/Footer@desktop'
import { Header } from './Components/Header/Header@desktop'

export const registry = new Registry({ id: registryId })

registry.set('Header', Header)
registry.set('Footer', Footer)

export const AppDesktop = withRegistry(registry)(AppCommon)

3. In App@mobile.tsx

import { Registry, withRegistry } from '@bem-react/di'
import { App as AppCommon, registryId } from './App'

import { Footer } from './Components/Footer/Footer@mobile'
import { Header } from './Components/Header/Header@mobile'

export const registry = new Registry({ id: registryId })

registry.set('Header', Header)
registry.set('Footer', 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 React from 'react'
import { cn } from '@bem-react/classname'
import { Header } from './Components/Header/Header'
import { Footer } from './Components/Footer/Footer'

export const App = () => (
  <>
    <Header />
    <Footer />
  </>
)

Now the dependencies can be injected based on the currently used registry

with ComponentRegistryConsumer

import React from 'react'
import { cn } from '@bem-react/classname'
import { ComponentRegistryConsumer } from '@bem-react/di'

// No Header or Footer imports

const cnApp = cn('App')

export const App = () => (
  <ComponentRegistryConsumer id={cnApp()}>
    {({ Header, Footer }) => (
      <>
        <Header />
        <Footer />
      </>
    )}
  </ComponentRegistryConsumer>
)

with useComponentRegistry (require react version 16.8.0+)

import React from 'react'
import { cn } from '@bem-react/classname'
import { useComponentRegistry } from '@bem-react/di'

// No Header or Footer imports

const cnApp = cn('App')

export const App = () => {
  const { Header, Footer } = useComponentRegistry(cnApp())

  return (
    <>
      <Header />
      <Footer />
    </>
  )
}

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'

Replacing components

Components inside registry can be replaced (e.g. for experiments) by wrapping withRegistry(...)(App) with another registry.

import { Registry, withRegistry } from '@bem-react/di'

import { AppDesktop, registryId } from './App@desktop'
import { HeaderExperimental } from './experiments/Components/Header/Header'

const expRegistry = new Registry({ id: registryId })

// replacing original Header with HeaderExperimental
expRegistry.set('Header', HeaderExperimental)

// AppDesktopExperimental will call App with HeaderExperimental as 'Header'
export const AppDesktopExperimental = withRegistry(expRegistry)(AppDesktop)

When App extracts components from registry DI actually takes all registries defined above and merges. By default higher defined registry overrides lower defined one.

If at some point you want to create registry that wan't be overrided just call the constructor with overridable: false.

const boldRegistry = new Registry({ id: cnApp(), overridable: false })

Extending components

You can extend (e.g. for experiments) a component using method extends(...) in overridden registry.

import { Registry, withRegistry, withBase } from '@bem-react/di'
import { AppDesktop, registryId } from './App@desktop'

const expRegistry = new Registry({ id: registryId })

// extends original Header
expRegistry.extends('Header', BaseHeader => props => (
  <div>
    <BaseHeader height={200} color={red}/>
  </div>
))

// AppDesktopExperimental will call App with extended 'Header'
export const AppDesktopExperimental = withRegistry(expRegistry)(AppDesktop)

DI merges nested registries composing and ordinary components for you. So you always can get a reference to previous component's implementation.

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 27 Apr 2021

Did you know?

Socket

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.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc