What is html-react-parser?
The html-react-parser package is designed to convert HTML strings into React components. This is particularly useful when you need to dynamically render HTML content in a React application, such as content fetched from a CMS or API that returns HTML. It allows for custom handling of elements, attributes, and can work with server-side rendering.
What are html-react-parser's main functionalities?
Parsing HTML strings to React Elements
This feature allows you to convert a string of HTML into React elements that can be rendered inside a React component.
import parse from 'html-react-parser';
const html = '<div>Hello World</div>';
const reactElement = parse(html);
Replacing or modifying elements during parsing
This feature allows you to define a 'replace' function in the options object that can modify or replace elements during the parsing process.
import parse, { domToReact } from 'html-react-parser';
const html = '<p id="replace">Replace me</p>';
const options = {
replace: ({ attribs, children }) => {
if (attribs && attribs.id === 'replace') {
return <span>{domToReact(children)}</span>;
}
}
};
const reactElement = parse(html, options);
Preserving custom attributes and event handlers
This feature allows you to preserve custom attributes and potentially event handlers when parsing HTML to React elements.
import parse from 'html-react-parser';
const html = '<div onclick="handleClick()">Click me</div>';
const reactElement = parse(html, {
preserveAttributes: ['onclick']
});
Other packages similar to html-react-parser
react-html-parser
react-html-parser is similar to html-react-parser in that it converts HTML strings into React components. However, it may differ in the specifics of its API and the options it provides for customization during the parsing process.
dangerously-set-html-content
dangerously-set-html-content provides a component that can be used to set raw HTML content. It is similar to using the dangerouslySetInnerHTML prop in React but encapsulated in a component for easier use. It does not offer the same level of customization or parsing capabilities as html-react-parser.
sanitize-html-react
sanitize-html-react is designed to sanitize HTML strings before they are rendered to prevent XSS attacks. It can be used in conjunction with html-react-parser to first sanitize the HTML string and then parse it into React components. It focuses more on security rather than parsing.
html-react-parser
An HTML to React parser:
Parser(htmlString[, options])
The parser converts an HTML string to React Element(s).
There is also an option to replace element(s) with your own React Element(s) via the parser options.
Example
var Parser = require('html-react-parser');
Parser('<p>Hello, world!</p>');
JSFiddle
Installation
NPM:
npm install html-react-parser --save
Yarn:
yarn add html-react-parser
CDN:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/react@16/umd/react.production.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/html-react-parser@latest/dist/html-react-parser.min.js"></script>
See examples.
Usage
Given that you have the following imported:
import Parser from 'html-react-parser';
import { render } from 'react-dom';
You can render an element:
render(
Parser('<p>single</p>'),
document.getElementById('root')
);
You can render multiple elements:
render(
<div>
{Parser('<p>brother</p><p>sister</p>')}
</div>,
document.getElementById('root')
);
render(
React.createElement('div', {},
Parser('<p>brother</p><p>sister</p>')
),
document.getElementById('root')
);
You can render nested elements:
render(
Parser('<ul><li>inside</li></ul>'),
document.getElementById('root')
);
The parser will also preserve attributes:
render(
Parser('<section id="foo" class="bar baz" data-qux="42">look at me now</section>'),
document.getElementById('root')
);
Options
replace(domNode)
The replace
method allows you to swap an element with your own React Element.
The first argument is domNode
, which is an object that has the same output as htmlparser2.parseDOM
.
The element is only replaced if a valid React Element is returned.
Parser('<p id="replace">text</p>', {
replace: function(domNode) {
if (domNode.attribs && domNode.attribs.id === 'replace') {
return <span>replaced</span>;
}
}
});
Advanced example (keep the replaced children):
import domToReact from 'html-react-parser/lib/dom-to-react';
const html = `
<div>
<p id="main">
<span class="prettify">
keep me and make me pretty!
</span>
</p>
</div>
`;
const parserOptions = {
replace: (domNode) => {
if (!domNode.attribs) return;
if (domNode.attribs.id === 'main') {
return (
<span style={{ fontSize: '42px' }}>
{domToReact(domNode.children, options)}
</span>
);
} else if (domNode.attribs.class === 'prettify') {
return (
<span style={{ color: 'hotpink' }}>
{domToReact(domNode.children, options)}
</span>
);
}
}
};
render(
Parser(html, parserOptions),
document.getElementById('root')
);
It will output the following:
<div>
<span style="font-size: 42px;">
<span class="prettify" style="color: hotpink;">
keep me and make me pretty!
</span>
</span>
</div>
Testing
$ npm test
$ npm run lint
Release
$ npm run release
$ npm publish
$ git push --follow-tags
Special Thanks
License
MIT