@open-tender/components
A component library for use with the Open Tender open source web app: open-tender-web.
This library is only relevant for restaurant brands that are customers of Open Tender. To learn more about establishing an Open Tender account, please visit our website.
Installation
Install via yarn:
yarn add @open-tender/components
Or via npm:
npm install --save @open-tender/components
Purpose
This library handles some of the most complex components featured in the Open Tender web app, including:
- button variations that come preconfigured with a brand's styles
- map and autocomplete components for Google Maps
- a menu item builder and its constituent components
- all forms, including a highly complex
<CheckoutForm />
The benefits of using this libray are many:
- all components come with a restaurant brand's configured styles (which are passed down via an Emotion theme from the Open Tender web app)
- forms, in general, are annoying, especially in React
- the
<CheckoutForm />
is super complex based on the flexibility of the Open Tender platform around different tender types, service charges, discounts, promo codes, gift cards, loyalty points, etc. - the menu item
<Builder />
used to associate modifiers with a menu item handles a fairly complex set of rules across one or more modifier groups - Google Maps can be a pain to work with
These are all very important components, and if you leverage this library, you can drop them in and they all just work.
In addition, many of the components have been decoupled into custom hooks and presentational components so you can customize the presentation while getting all the complex functionality "for free" (the useBuilder
custom hook is a prime example, and all of the forms are implemented this way).
In general, this library is designed to handle the hard stuff for you, so you can focus on the fun parts of designing and building a customized user experience.
Theme Support via Emotion
This library leverages Emotion for CSS-in-JS styled components and theme support via the @emotion/react
and @emotion/styled
packages (which are installed in the open-tender-web app).
The theme is passed down by the open-tender-web app, and you can read more about how this works via the Styling with Emotion section of the open-tender-web readme.
The punchline here is that all of these components come with a brand's styles built-in, which is helpful for things like buttons that come in four different variations.
Usage
Buttons
As noted above, one of the most common uses of this library in the open-tender-web app is for button variations. A brand can configure four different types of buttons that come in one of four possible color combinations. Here's an example:
import { ButtonStyled } from '@open-tender/components'
<ButtonStyled
icon={<Home size={null} />}
onClick={() => history.push('/')}
size="big"
color="secondary"
>
Home
</ButtonStyled>
In this case, we're using the "big" button type and the "secondary" color scheme. You can see all of the possibilities in the buttons
attribute of the example Open Tender theme.
Forms
Here's an example of using a form component:
import { ProfileForm } from '@open-tender/components'
const AccountProfile = () => {
const dispatch = useDispatch()
const { profile, loading, error } = useSelector(selectCustomer)
const update = useCallback(
(data) => dispatch(updateCustomer(data)),
[dispatch]
)
return (
<ProfileForm
profile={profile}
loading={loading}
error={error}
update={update}
/>
)
}
As you can see above, the form receives data and a dispatch function from the open-tender-web app, and all of the inputs, error handling, etc. is handled by the <ProfileForm />
component. So you don't need to worry about creating all of the different inputs and handling user input - the inputs will automatically come with the brand's configured styles. Here's an example of what this form looks like:
Pretty complex, but all of the inputs are styled for you via the theme, which is configured by the brand in the Open Tender Admin Portal:
If you want to customize the inputs beyond what comes with the theme styles, then you can use the useProfileForm
custom hook and build the inputs and form yourself, following the example of the <ProfileForm />
component in this library.
More Examples
You can see many more examples in the open-tender-web app itself.
Issues
If you find a bug or have a question, please file an issue on our issue tracker on GitHub.
License
MIT
About
Built and maintained by Open Tender.