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@harvest-profit/doc-flux
Advanced tools
Flux/React framework for creating any document, just define a few DOM components to transform into the document.
Flux/React framework for creating any document, just define a few DOM components to transform into the document.
See an example of how to generate Spreadsheets https://github.com/humphreyja/sample-doc-flux-spreadsheets
To start, you must define a document. Think of this as the root. You will define a few document metadata options and specify which component it will render. Below I am using the DocFlux PDFS package to create a pdf that uses the Table
component specified in the next section. documentSettings
takes options specified in PDFMake document metadata docs.
import PropTypes from 'prop-types';
import { Document } from '@harvest-profit/doc-flux-pdfs';
import Table from './Table';
class TablePDF extends Document {
static propTypes = {
name: PropTypes.string.isRequired,
age: PropTypes.number.isRequired,
};
static styleSheet() {
return {
td: {
fontSize: 11,
marginTop: 2,
marginBottom: 2,
}
};
}
static documentSettings(props) {
return {
name: `People: ${props.name}`,
pageMargins: [30, 50, 30, 50],
pageOrientation: 'portrait',
};
}
static component = Table;
}
export default TablePDF;
The following is a sample component that will render a table. Notice, the tname
tag. This is a special tag created from the DocFlux Spreadsheets package. It names the tab to People
in excel. For PDFs, this will be ignored. NOTICE: For this to work, you must either import doc-flux
as React
or change the babel parser like the following:
import DocFlux from '@harvest-profit/doc-flux';
/** @jsx DocFlux.createElement */
//... rest of component file
It is easier to just specify it as React
import PropTypes from 'prop-types';
import React from '@harvest-profit/doc-flux';
import RandomRow from './RandomRow';
const Table = (props) => (
<table>
<tname>People</tname>
<thead>
<th>Name</th>
<th>Age</th>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>{props.name}</td>
<td>{props.age}</td>
</tr>
<RandomRow />
</tbody>
</table>
)
Table.propTypes = {
name: PropTypes.string.isRequired,
age: PropTypes.number.isRequired,
};
export default Table;
For testing, this uses a similar API to enzyme
. You can shallow render the component (which only renders the component and not any child components). Then you can actively find
or get text
from the rendered component. You can find
by tag name or component name.
Additionally, you can use at(index)
, first()
, or last()
on any find
results.
import React, { shallow } from '@harvest-profit/doc-flux';
import Table from './Table';
import RandomRow from './RandomRow';
describe('<Table />', () => {
it('should render', () => {
const wrapper = shallow(
<Table
name="Jake"
age={100}
/>
);
expect(wrapper.find('tr').text()).toContain('Jake');
expect(wrapper.find('tr').first().text()).toContain('Jake');
});
it('should find the RandomRow component', () => {
const wrapper = shallow(
<Table
name="Jake"
age={100}
/>
);
expect(wrapper.find(RandomRow).length).toEqual(1);
});
});
Clone this repo, and begin committing changes. PRs are preferred over committing directly to master.
To run tests locally on your machine, run the following:
yarn run test
To preview documentation locally on your machine, run the following:
yarn run build-docs
After merging your pull request, consider updating the documentation with the following command:
yarn run publish-docs
To deploy a new version to NPM, bump the version number, commit/merge to master
, and run the following:
yarn run clean
yarn run build
# Either NPM
npm publish
# Or Yarn, they do the same thing
yarn publish
This project is MIT licensed
FAQs
Flux/React framework for creating any document, just define a few DOM components to transform into the document.
The npm package @harvest-profit/doc-flux receives a total of 77 weekly downloads. As such, @harvest-profit/doc-flux popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @harvest-profit/doc-flux demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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