.isRequired
tcomb-react
has been tested and found working on the following targets. The list is not exhaustive and tcomb-react
will probably work on other versions that haven't been listed.
React: ^0.13.0
, ^0.14.0
, ^15.0.0
@props
decorator (ES7)
For an equivalent implementation in ES5, or for Stateless Components, see the propTypes
function below.
Signature
type Props = {[key: string]: TcombType}; type PropsType = TcombStruct | TcombInterface; type Type = Props | PropsType | Refinement<PropsType>; type Options = { strict?: boolean // default true }; @props(type: Type, options?: Options)
where
type
can be a map string -> TcombType
, a tcomb
struct, a tcomb
interface, a refinement of a tcomb
struct / interface, a refinement of a tcomb
interfaceoptions
:
strict: boolean
(default true
) if true
checks for unwanted additional propsExample (ES7)
import t from 'tcomb' import { props } from 'tcomb-react' const Gender = t.enums.of(['Male', 'Female'], 'Gender') const URL = t.refinement(t.String, (s) => s.startsWith('http'), 'URL') @props({ name: t.String, // a required string surname: t.maybe(t.String), // an optional string age: t.Number, // a required number gender: Gender, // an enum avatar: URL // a refinement }) class Card extends React.Component { render() { return ( <div> <p>{this.props.name}</p> ... </div> ) } }
Unwanted additional props
By default tcomb-react
checks for unwanted additional props:
@props({ name: t.String }) class Person extends React.Component { render() { return ( <div> <p>{this.props.name}</p> </div> ) } } ... <Person name="Giulio" surname="Canti" />
Output
Warning: Failed propType: [tcomb] Invalid additional prop(s):
[
"surname"
]
supplied to Person.
Note. You can opt-out passing the option
argument { strict: false }
.
Signature
Same as @props
.
Stateless Component Example
import { propTypes } from 'tcomb-react' const MyComponentProps = t.interface({ name: t.String, }); const MyComponent = (props) => ( <div /> ); MyComponent.propTypes = propTypes(MyComponentProps);
ES5 React.createClass
Example
var t = require('tcomb'); var propTypes = require('tcomb-react').propTypes; var Gender = t.enums.of(['Male', 'Female'], 'Gender'); var URL = t.refinement(t.String, function (s) { return s.startsWith('http'); }, 'URL'); var Card = React.createClass({ propTypes: propTypes({ name: t.String, // a required string surname: t.maybe(t.String), // an optional string age: t.Number, // a required number gender: Gender, // an enum avatar: URL // a refinement }), render: function () { return ( <div> <p>{this.props.name}</p> ... </div> ); } });
The @props
decorator sets propTypes
on the target component to use a custom validator function built around tcomb types for each specified prop.
For example, the following:
const URL = t.refinement(t.String, (s) => s.startsWith('http'), 'URL'); @props({ name: t.String, url: URL, }) class MyComponent extends React.Component { // ... }
is roughly equivalent to:
const URL = t.refinement(t.String, (s) => s.startsWith('http'), 'URL'); class MyComponent extends React.Component { // ... } MyComponent.propTypes = { name: function(props, propName, componentName) { if (!t.validate(props[propName], t.String).isValid()) { return new Error('...'); } }, url: function(props, propName, componentName) { if (!t.validate(props[propName], URL).isValid()) { return new Error('...'); } }, }
Using babel-plugin-tcomb you can express propTypes
as Flow type annotations:
import React from 'react' import ReactDOM from 'react-dom' import type { $Refinement } from 'tcomb' import { props } from 'tcomb-react' type Gender = 'Male' | 'Female'; const isUrl = (s) => s.startsWith('http') type URL = string & $Refinement<typeof isUrl>; type Props = { name: string, surname: ?string, age: number, gender: Gender, avatar: URL }; @props(Props) class Card extends React.Component { render() { return ( <div> <p>{this.props.name}</p> ... </div> ) } }Extract documentation from your components
Given a path to a component file returns a JSON / JavaScript blob containing props types, default values and comments.
Signature
(path: string | Array<string>) => Object
Example
Source
import t from 'tcomb' import { props } from 'tcomb-react' /** * Component description here * @param name - name description here * @param surname - surname description here */ @props({ name: t.String, // a required string surname: t.maybe(t.String) // an optional string }) export default class Card extends React.Component { static defaultProps = { surname: 'Canti' // default value for surname prop } render() { return ( <div> <p>{this.props.name}</p> <p>{this.props.surname}</p> </div> ) } }
Usage
import parse from 'tcomb-react/lib/parse' const json = parse('./components/Card.js') console.log(JSON.stringify(json, null, 2))
Output
{ "name": "Card", "description": "Component description here", "props": { "name": { "kind": "irreducible", "name": "String", "required": true, "description": "name description here" }, "surname": { "kind": "irreducible", "name": "String", "required": false, "defaultValue": "Canti", "description": "surname description here" } } }
Note. Since parse
uses runtime type introspection, your components should be require
able from your script (you may be required to shim the browser environment).
Parsing multiple components
import parse from 'tcomb-react/lib/parse' import path from 'path' import glob from 'glob' function getPath(file) { return path.resolve(process.cwd(), file); } parse(glob.sync('./components/*.js').map(getPath));
Given a JSON / JavaScript blob returned by parse
returns a markdown containing the components documentation.
Signature
Example
Usage
import parse from 'tcomb-react/lib/parse' import toMarkdown from 'tcomb-react/lib/toMarkdown' const json = parse('./components/Card.js') console.log(toMarkdown(json));
Output
## Card Component description here **Props** - `name: String` name description here - `surname: String` (optional, default: `"Canti"`) surname description hereAugmented pre-defined types
tcomb-react
exports some useful pre-defined types:
ReactElement
ReactNode
ReactChild
ReactChildren
Example
import { props, ReactChild } from 'tcomb-react'; @props({ children: ReactChild // only one child is allowed }) class MyComponent extends React.Component { render() { return ( <div> {this.props.children} </div> ); } }Support for babel-plugin-tcomb
The following types for Flow are exported:
ReactElementT
ReactNodeT
ReactChildT
ReactChildrenT
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4