@remote-ui/react
This library provides a custom React renderer that gives you the full power of React for your remote application, and provides an optional host layer that makes it easy for existing React apps to integrate a remote root. For a full overview of how @remote-ui/react
can fit in with the different pieces of remote-ui, you can refer to our comprehensive example.
Installation
Using yarn
:
yarn add @remote-ui/react
or, using npm
:
npm install @remote-ui/react --save
Usage
Remote environment
render()
The main entrypoint for this package, @remote-ui/react
, provides the custom React renderer that outputs instructions to a @remote-ui/core
RemoteRoot
object. This lets you use the remote-ui system for communicating patch updates to host components over a bridge, but have React help manage your stateful application logic. To run a React app against a RemoteRoot
, use the render
function exported by this library, passing in the remote root and your root React component:
import {render, createRemoteRoot} from '@remote-ui/react';
const Button = 'Button';
const channel = () => {};
const remoteRoot = createRemoteRoot(channel, {
components: [Button],
});
function App() {
return <Button onClick={() => console.log('clicked!')}>Click me!</Button>;
}
render(<App />, remoteRoot);
As you add, remove, and update host components in your React tree, this renderer will output those operations to the RemoteRoot
. Since remote components are just a combination of a name and allowed properties, they map exactly to React components, which behave the same way.
createRemoteReactComponent()
In the example above, our Button
component was not strongly typed. Like with @remote-ui/core
’s createRemoteComponent
, We can use the createRemoteReactComponent
function from this library to create a strongly typed component to use. @remote-ui/react
’s API is the exact same as createRemoteComponent
(including the same type arguments), but the value returned is both a RemoteComponentType
and a ReactComponentType
, both with appropriate prop types.
import {createRemoteReactComponent} from '@remote-ui/react';
const Button = createRemoteReactComponent<'Button', {onPress(): void}>(
'Button',
);
const button = <Button>Save</Button>;
If you have a situation where you have separate packages for React and non-React components (e.g., to support the smaller bundle size of using only the core library), you can pass the result of calling @remote-ui/core
’s createRemoteComponent
to this version of the function, and the props will be inferred automatically.
import {createRemoteComponent} from '@remote-ui/core';
import {createRemoteReactComponent} from '@remote-ui/react';
const Button = createRemoteComponent<'Button', {onPress(): void}>('Button');
const ReactButton = createRemoteReactComponent(Button);
const button = <Button>Save</Button>;
RemoteFragment
In the example above, in order to have icon component as a prop for the Button component, you can use a RemoteFragment
:
import {createRemoteComponent, RemoteFragment} from '@remote-ui/core';
import {createRemoteReactComponent} from '@remote-ui/react';
interface IconProps {
src: string;
}
const Icon = createRemoteComponent<'Icon', IconProps>('Icon');
const ReactIcon = createRemoteReactComponent(Icon);
interface ButtonProps {
icon: RemoteFragment;
onPress(): void;
}
const Button = createRemoteComponent<'Button', ButtonProps>('Button');
const ReactButton = createRemoteReactComponent(Button, {
fragmentProps: ['icon'],
});
const button = (
<ReactButton icon={<ReactIcon src="icon-src" />} onPress={() => {}}>
Save
</ReactButton>
);
icon
prop in ReactButton
is automatically converted to a ReactElement. If you want to have explict type of ReactButtonProps, you can use ReactPropsFromRemoteComponentType
as follow:
import {ReactPropsFromRemoteComponentType} from '@remote-ui/react';
type ReactButtonProps = ReactPropsFromRemoteComponentType<typeof Button>;
You can also mix RemoteFragment with other primitive types like below:
import {createRemoteComponent, RemoteFragment} from '@remote-ui/core';
import {createRemoteReactComponent} from '@remote-ui/react';
interface IconProps {
src: string;
}
const Icon = createRemoteComponent<'Icon', IconProps>('Icon');
const ReactIcon = createRemoteReactComponent(Icon);
interface ButtonProps {
icon: string | RemoteFragment;
onPress(): void;
}
const Button = createRemoteComponent<'Button', ButtonProps>('Button');
const ReactButton = createRemoteReactComponent(Button, {
fragmentProps: ['icon'],
});
const button1 = (
<ReactButton icon="icon-src" onPress={() => {}}>
Save
</ReactButton>
);
const button2 = (
<ReactButton icon={<ReactIcon src="icon-src" />} onPress={() => {}}>
Save
</ReactButton>
);
Host environment
This package provides a second entrypoint, @remote-ui/react/host
, with a collection of utilities for implementing the host side of a remote-ui environment in a React application. These utilities work for any React renderer, but will most commonly be used in applications that use react-dom
or react-native
. These host utilities take care of receiving the patch updates from a remote context, and maps the resulting component tree to a set of React components you provide.
To show these utilities in action, we’ll use the same Button
example we have looked at for the remote APIs. The host environment for those examples needs to be able to render the real Button
component with the props received from the remote environment. To do so, we first create our host-side Button
component (we’ll assume we are in a DOM environment, so this component will render an HTML button):
export function Button({onPress, children}) {
return (
<button type="button" onClick={() => onPress()}>
{children}
</button>
);
}
The React component we will use to render our remote component tree needs to know how to map from a component name to component implementation. To do this, pass your host components to createController()
, a function provided by this library:
import {useMemo} from 'react';
import {createController} from '@remote-ui/react/host';
import {Button} from './Button';
function MyRemoteRenderer() {
const controller = useMemo(() => createController({Button}), []);
}
In addition to the controller
, we need to create a RemoteReceiver
object. This object is responsible for accepting updates from the remote context, and turning them back into a tree of UI components on the host:
import {useMemo, useEffect} from 'react';
import {createController, createRemoteReceiver} from '@remote-ui/react/host';
import {Button} from './Button';
function MyRemoteRenderer() {
const controller = useMemo(() => createController({Button}), []);
const receiver = useMemo(() => createRemoteReceiver(), []);
useEffect(() => {
sendReceiverToRemoteContext(receiver.receive);
}, [receiver]);
}
Finally, you can pass these two objects to the RemoteRenderer
component provided by this entrypoint, which will start listening for changes to the receiver
, and render the host React component equivalent of the remote component tree.
import {useMemo, useEffect} from 'react';
import {
createController,
createRemoteReceiver,
RemoteRenderer,
} from '@remote-ui/react/host';
import {Button} from './Button';
function MyRemoteRenderer() {
const controller = useMemo(() => createController({Button}), []);
const receiver = useMemo(() => createRemoteReceiver(), []);
useEffect(() => {
sendReceiverToRemoteContext(receiver.receive);
}, [receiver]);
return <RemoteRenderer receiver={receiver} controller={controller} />;
}
Other exports
This package exports a helper type for extracting information from components created by createRemoteReactComponent
:
-
ReactPropsFromRemoteComponentType
accepts any type as a type argument and, if it is a remote component, returns its prop types when used as a React component.
import {
createRemoteReactComponent,
ReactPropsFromRemoteComponentType,
} from '@remote-ui/react';
const Button = createRemoteReactComponent<'Button', {onPress?(): void}>(
'Button',
);
type ButtonProps = ReactPropsFromRemoteComponentType<typeof Button>;
It also exports a hook you can use to get direct, up-to-date access to a StatefulRemoteSubscribable
created by @remote-ui/async-subscription
:
import type {StatefulRemoteSubscribable} from '@remote-ui/async-subscription';
import {useRemoteSubscription} from '@remote-ui/react';
function MyComponent({
products,
}: {
products: StatefulRemoteSubscribable<{id: string}[]>;
}) {
const currentProducts = useRemoteSubscription(products);
return <>{currentProducts.map((product) => product.id)}</>;
}