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@minuscode/draft-js-export-html
Advanced tools
This is a module for DraftJS that will export your editor content to semantic HTML.
It was extracted from React-RTE and placed into a separate module for more general use. Hopefully it can be helpful in your projects.
npm install --save draft-js-export-html
import {stateToHTML} from 'draft-js-export-html';
let html = stateToHTML(contentState);
You can optionally pass a second "options" argument to stateToHTML which should be an object with one or more of the following properties:
inlineStylesYou can define rendering options for inline styles. This applies to built-in inline styles (e.g. BOLD) or your own custom inline styles (e.g. RED). You can specify which element/tag name will be used (e.g. use <b> instead of <strong> for BOLD). You can add custom attributes (e.g. class="foo") or add some styling (e.g. color: red).
Example:
let options = {
inlineStyles: {
// Override default element (`strong`).
BOLD: {element: 'b'},
ITALIC: {
// Add custom attributes. You can also use React-style `className`.
attributes: {class: 'foo'},
// Use camel-case. Units (`px`) will be added where necessary.
style: {fontSize: 12}
},
// Use a custom inline style. Default element is `span`.
RED: {style: {color: '#900'}},
},
};
let html = stateToHTML(contentState, options);
inlineStylesFnYou can define custom function to return rendering options based on inline styles. Similar to draft.js customStyleFn.
Example:
let options = {
inlineStyleFn: (styles) => {
let key = 'color-';
let color = styles.filter((value) => value.startsWith(key)).first();
if (color) {
return {
element: 'span',
style: {
color: color.replace(key, ''),
},
};
}
},
};
let html = stateToHTML(contentState, options);
blockRenderersYou can define a custom renderer for any block type. Pass a function that accepts block as an argument. You can return a string to render this block yourself, or return nothing (null or undefined) to defer to the default renderer.
Example:
let options = {
blockRenderers: {
atomic: (block) => {
let data = block.getData();
if (data.get('foo') === 'bar') {
return '<div>' + escape(block.getText()) + '</div>';
}
},
},
};
let html = stateToHTML(contentState, options);
defaultBlockTagIf you don't want to define the full custom render for a block, you can define the type of the parent block tag that will be created if the block type doesn't match any known type.
If you don't want any parent block tag, you can set defaultBlockTag to null.
Example:
let options = {
defaultBlockTag: 'div',
};
let html = stateToHTML(contentState, options);
blockStyleFnYou can define custom styles and attributes for your block, utilizing the underlying built-in rendering logic of the tags, but adding your own attributes or styles on top. The blockStyleFn option takes a block and returns an Object similar to inlineStyles of the following signature or null:
{
attributes: {}
style: {}
}
Example:
let options = {
blockStyleFn(block) => {
if (block.getData().get('color')) {
return {
style: {
color: block.getData().get('color')
}
}
}
}
}
let html = stateToHTML(contentState, options);
entityStyleFnIt is passed an entity object
and should return an entityStyle object in the shape of:
{
element: 'element', // name of DOM element as a string
attributes: {},
style: {}
}
Example:
let options = {
entityStyleFn: (entity) => {
const entityType = entity.get('type').toLowerCase();
if (entityType === 'image') {
const data = entity.getData();
return {
element: 'img',
attributes: {
src: data.src,
},
style: {
// Put styles here...
},
};
}
},
};
let html = stateToHTML(contentState, options);
If you want to help out, please open an issue to discuss or join us on Slack.
This software is BSD Licensed.
FAQs
DraftJS: Export ContentState to HTML
We found that @minuscode/draft-js-export-html demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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