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@storyblok/react

SDK to integrate Storyblok into your project using React.

  • 1.3.4
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@storyblok/react

The React plugin you need to interact with Storyblok API and enable the Real-time Visual Editing Experience.


Storyblok React npm

Follow @Storyblok Follow @Storyblok

🚀 Usage

If you are first-time user of the Storyblok, read the Getting Started guide to get a project ready in less than 5 minutes.

Installation

Install @storyblok/react and it's peer dependency axios:

npm install @storyblok/react axios
// yarn add @storyblok/react axios
From a CDN

Install the file from the CDN:

<script src="https://unpkg.com/@storyblok/react"></script>

Initialization

Register the plugin on your application and add the access token of your Storyblok space. You can also add the apiPlugin in case that you want to use the Storyblok API Client: For Spaces created under US region, you should pass the region like { apiOptions: { region: 'us' } }. If your space is under EU, no further configuration is required.

import { storyblokInit, apiPlugin } from "@storyblok/react";

storyblokInit({
  accessToken: "YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN",
  // bridge: false,
  apiOptions: {
    region: "us", // Pass this key/value if your space was created under US region
  },
  use: [apiPlugin],
  components: {
    page: Page,
    teaser: Teaser,
    grid: Grid,
    feature: Feature,
  },
});

Add all your components to the components object in the storyblokInit function.

That's it! All the features are enabled for you: the Api Client for interacting with Storyblok CDN API, and Storyblok Bridge for real-time visual editing experience.

You can enable/disable some of these features if you don't need them, so you save some KB. Please read the "Features and API" section

Getting Started

@storyblok/react does three actions when you initialize it:

  • Provides a getStoryblokApi object in your app, which is an instance of storyblok-js-client.
  • Loads Storyblok Bridge for real-time visual updates.
  • Provides a storyblokEditable function to link editable components to the Storyblok Visual Editor.
1. Fetching Content

Inject getStoryblokApi:

import { storyblokInit, apiPlugin, getStoryblokApi } from "@storyblok/react";

storyblokInit({
  accessToken: "YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN",
  // bridge: false,
  // apiOptions: {  },
  use: [apiPlugin],
  components: {
    page: Page,
    teaser: Teaser,
    grid: Grid,
    feature: Feature,
  },
});

const storyblokApi = getStoryblokApi();
const { data } = await storyblokApi.get("cdn/stories", { version: "draft" });

Note: if you don't use apiPlugin, you can use your prefered method or function to fetch your data.

2. Listen to Storyblok Visual Editor events

Use useStoryblok to get the new story every time is triggered a change event from the Visual Editor. You need to pass the slug as first param, and apiOptions as second param to update the new story. bridgeOptions (third param) is optional param if you want to set the options for bridge by yourself:

import { useStoryblok, StoryblokComponent } from "@storyblok/react";

function App() {
  const story = useStoryblok("react", { version: "draft" });

  if (!story?.content) {
    return <div>Loading...</div>;
  }

  return <StoryblokComponent blok={story.content} />;
}

export default App;

You can pass Bridge options as a third parameter as well:

useStoryblok(story.id, (story) => (state.story = story), {
  resolveRelations: ["Article.author"],
});

For every component you've defined in your Storyblok space, call the storyblokEditable function with the blok content:

import { storyblokEditable } from "@storyblok/react";

const Feature = ({ blok }) => {
  return (
    <div {...storyblokEditable(blok)} key={blok._uid} data-test="feature">
      <div>
        <div>{blok.name}</div>
        <p>{blok.description}</p>
      </div>
    </div>
  );
};

export default Feature;

Where blok is the actual blok data coming from Storblok's Content Delivery API.

As an example, you can check in our Next.js example demo how we use APIs provided from React SDK to combine with Next.js projects.

import {
  useStoryblokState,
  getStoryblokApi,
  StoryblokComponent,
} from "@storyblok/react";

export default function Home({ story: initialStory }) {
  const story = useStoryblokState(initialStory);

  if (!story.content) {
    return <div>Loading...</div>;
  }

  return <StoryblokComponent blok={story.content} />;
}

export async function getStaticProps({ preview = false }) {
  const storyblokApi = getStoryblokApi();
  let { data } = await storyblokApi.get(`cdn/stories/react`, {
    version: "draft",
  });

  return {
    props: {
      story: data ? data.story : false,
      preview,
    },
    revalidate: 3600, // revalidate every hour
  };
}

If you'd like to have a React.js example demo, you can find it and try it out in your environement from here: React.js example demo

Features and API

You can choose the features to use when you initialize the plugin. In that way, you can improve Web Performance by optimizing your page load and save some bytes.

Storyblok API

You can use an apiOptions object. This is passed down to the storyblok-js-client config object:

storyblokInit({
  accessToken: "YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN",
  apiOptions: {
    // storyblok-js-client config object
    cache: { type: "memory" },
  },
  use: [apiPlugin],
  components: {
    page: Page,
    teaser: Teaser,
    grid: Grid,
    feature: Feature,
  },
});

If you prefer to use your own fetch method, just remove the apiPlugin and storyblok-js-client won't be added to your application.

storyblokInit({});
Storyblok Bridge

If you don't use registerStoryblokBridge, you still have access to the raw window.StoryblokBridge:

const sbBridge = new window.StoryblokBridge(options);

sbBridge.on(["input", "published", "change"], (event) => {
  // ...
});
Rendering Rich Text

You can easily render rich text by using the renderRichText function that comes with @storyblok/react:

import { renderRichText } from "@storyblok/react";

const renderedRichText = renderRichText(blok.richtext);

You can set a custom Schema and component resolver globally at init time by using the richText init option:

import { RichTextSchema, storyblokInit } from "@storyblok/react";
import cloneDeep from "clone-deep";

const mySchema = cloneDeep(RichTextSchema); // you can make a copy of the default RichTextSchema
// ... and edit the nodes and marks, or add your own.
// Check the base RichTextSchema source here https://github.com/storyblok/storyblok-js-client/blob/master/source/schema.js

storyblokInit({
  accessToken: "<your-token>",
  richText: {
    schema: mySchema,
    resolver: (component, blok) => {
      switch (component) {
        case "my-custom-component":
          return `<div class="my-component-class">${blok.text}</div>`;
        default:
          return "Resolver not defined";
      }
    },
  },
});

You can also set a custom Schema and component resolver only once by passing the options as the second parameter to renderRichText function:

import { renderRichText } from "@storyblok/react";

renderRichText(blok.richTextField, {
  schema: mySchema,
  resolver: (component, blok) => {
    switch (component) {
      case "my-custom-component":
        return `<div class="my-component-class">${blok.text}</div>`;
        break;
      default:
        return `Component ${component} not found`;
    }
  },
});

ℹ️ More Resources

Support

Contributing

Please see our contributing guidelines and our code of conduct. This project use semantic-release for generate new versions by using commit messages and we use the Angular Convention to naming the commits. Check this question about it in semantic-release FAQ.

FAQs

Package last updated on 06 Dec 2022

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