# ReactPhoenix for Phoenix < 1.3 [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/geolessel/react-phoenix.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/geolessel/react-phoenix) [![Hex.pm](https://img.shields.io/hexpm/v/react_phoenix.svg)](https://hex.pm/packages/react_phoenix) Functions to make rendering React.js components easy in Phoenix. Combined with the javascript also included in this package, rendering React components in your Phoenix views is now much easier. The module was built with Brunch in mind (vs Webpack). Since Phoenix uses Brunch by default, this package can make getting React into your application much faster than switching over to a different system. ## Installation in 3 (or 4) EASY STEPS! This package is meant to be quick and painless to install into your Phoenix application. It is assumed that you have already brought React into your application through `npm`. > Would you rather watch a video? Watch me set it all up from `mix phoenix.new` to rendering > a React component in 4 minutes [here](https://youtu.be/icwjAbck8yk). ### 1. Declare the dependency The package can be installed by adding `react_phoenix` to your list of dependencies in `mix.exs`: ```elixir def deps do [{:react_phoenix, "~> 0.4.3"}] end ``` After adding to your mix file, run: ``` > mix deps.get ``` ### 2. Add the javascript dependency to package.json In order to correctly render a React component in your view templates, a provided javascript file must be included in your `package.json` file in the dependencies section. It might look like this: ``` { ... "dependencies": { "babel-preset-react": "^6.23.0", "minions.css": "^0.3.1", "phoenix": "file:deps/phoenix", "phoenix_html": "file:deps/phoenix_html", "react": "^15.4.2", "react-dom": "^15.4.2", "react-phoenix": "file:deps/react_phoenix" <-- ADD THIS! }, ... } ``` Then run ``` > npm install ``` ### 3. Import and initialize the javascript helper In your main application javascript file (usually `web/static/js/app.js`), add the following line: ```javascript import "react-phoenix" ``` ### 4. (optional) Import the module into your views for less typing If you'd like to just call `react_component(...)` in your views instead of the full `ReactPhoenix.ClientSide.react_component(...)`, you can import `ReactPhoenix.ClientSide` into your `web/web.ex` views section. It might look like this: ```elixir def view do quote do use Phoenix.View, root: "web/templates" import Phoenix.Controller, only: [get_csrf_token: 0, get_flash: 2, view_module: 1] use Phoenix.HTML import MyPhoenixApp.Router.Helpers import MyPhoenixApp.ErrorHelpers import MyPhoenixApp.Gettext import ReactPhoenix.ClientSide # <-- ADD THIS! end end ``` ## Usage Once installed, you can use `react_component` in your views by: 1. Making sure that the component you'd like rendered is in the global namespace. You can do that in `app.js` like this (for example): ```javascript import MyComponent from "./components/my_component" window.Components = { MyComponent } ``` 2. In your view template, you can then render it like this: ```elixir # with no props <%= ReactPhoenix.ClientSide.react_component("Components.MyComponent") %> # with props <%= ReactPhoenix.ClientSide.react_component("Components.MyComponent", %{language: "elixir", awesome: true}) %> # with props and a target html element id option <%= ReactPhoenix.ClientSide.react_component("Components.Characters", %{people: people}, target_id: "my-react-span") %> ``` This will render a special `div` element in your html output that will then be recognized by the javascript helper as a div that should be turned into a React component. It will then render the named component in that `div` (or a different element specified by ID via the `target_id` option). ## Troubleshooting * **I keep getting a compilation error like this** ``` 19 Apr 20:52:40 - error: Compiling of web/static/js/component.js failed. SyntaxError: web/static/js/component.js: Unexpected token (10:6) 8 | render() { 9 | return ( > 10 |

You rendered React!

| ^ 11 | ) 12 | } 13 | } ^G ``` Most likely, you haven't set up your brunch config to know how to handle JSX files. I recommend the following: 1. Run `npm install react babel-preset-react babel-preset-env --save` 2. Modify your `brunch-config.js` file to include those presets ```js // ... // Configure your plugins plugins: { babel: { presets: ["env", "react"], // <-- ADD THIS! // Do not use ES6 compiler in vendor code ignore: [/web\/static\/vendor/] } }, // ... ``` ## Documentation and other stuff This package is heavily inspired by the [react-rails](https://github.com/reactjs/react-rails) project. For more detailed documentation, check out the hex docs at [https://hexdocs.pm/react_phoenix](https://hexdocs.pm/react_phoenix)