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syntax-tree/hast-util-to-jsx-runtime: hast utility to transform to preact, react, solid, svelte, vue, etc

hast utility to transform a tree to preact, react, solid, svelte, vue, etcetera, with an automatic JSX runtime.

This package is a utility that takes a hast tree and an automatic JSX runtime and turns the tree into anything you wish.

You can use this package when you have a hast syntax tree and want to use it with whatever framework.

This package uses an automatic JSX runtime, which is a sort of lingua franca for frameworks to support JSX.

Notably, automatic runtimes have support for passing extra information in development, and have guaranteed support for fragments.

This package is ESM only. In Node.js (version 16+), install with npm:

npm install hast-util-to-jsx-runtime

In Deno with esm.sh:

import {toJsxRuntime} from 'https://esm.sh/hast-util-to-jsx-runtime@2'

In browsers with esm.sh:

<script type="module">
  import {toJsxRuntime} from 'https://esm.sh/hast-util-to-jsx-runtime@2?bundle'
</script>
import {h} from 'hastscript'
import {toJsxRuntime} from 'hast-util-to-jsx-runtime'
import {Fragment, jsxs, jsx} from 'react/jsx-runtime'
import {renderToStaticMarkup} from 'react-dom/server'

const tree = h('h1', 'Hello, world!')

const doc = renderToStaticMarkup(toJsxRuntime(tree, {Fragment, jsxs, jsx}))

console.log(doc)

Yields:

Note: to add better type support, register a global JSX namespace:

import type {JSX as Jsx} from 'react/jsx-runtime'

declare global {
  namespace JSX {
    type ElementClass = Jsx.ElementClass
    type Element = Jsx.Element
    type IntrinsicElements = Jsx.IntrinsicElements
  }
}

This package exports the identifier toJsxRuntime. It exports the TypeScript types Components, CreateEvaluater, ElementAttributeNameCase, EvaluateExpression, EvaluateProgram, Evaluater, ExtraProps, Fragment, Jsx, JsxDev, Options, Props, Source, Space, and StylePropertyNameCase. There is no default export.

toJsxRuntime(tree, options)

Transform a hast tree to preact, react, solid, svelte, vue, etcetera, with an automatic JSX runtime.

Result from your configured JSX runtime (JSX.Element if defined, otherwise unknown which you can cast yourself).

Possible components to use (TypeScript type).

Each key is a tag name typed in JSX.IntrinsicElements, if defined. Each value is either a different tag name or a component accepting the corresponding props (and an optional node prop if passNode is on).

You can access props at JSX.IntrinsicElements. For example, to find props for a, use JSX.IntrinsicElements['a'].

import type {Element} from 'hast'

type ExtraProps = {node?: Element | undefined}

type Components = {
  [TagName in keyof JSX.IntrinsicElements]:
    | Component<JSX.IntrinsicElements[TagName] & ExtraProps>
    | keyof JSX.IntrinsicElements
}

type Component<ComponentProps> =
  // Class component:
  | (new (props: ComponentProps) => JSX.ElementClass)
  // Function component:
  | ((props: ComponentProps) => JSX.Element | string | null | undefined)

Create an evaluator that turns ESTree ASTs from embedded MDX into values (TypeScript type).

There are no parameters.

Evaluater (Evaluater).

Casing to use for attribute names (TypeScript type).

HTML casing is for example class, stroke-linecap, xml:lang. React casing is for example className, strokeLinecap, xmlLang.

type ElementAttributeNameCase = 'html' | 'react'

Turn an MDX expression into a value (TypeScript type).

Result of expression (unknown).

Turn an MDX program (export/import statements) into a value (TypeScript type).

Result of program (unknown); should likely be undefined as ESM changes the scope but doesn’t yield something.

Evaluator that turns ESTree ASTs from embedded MDX into values (TypeScript type).

Extra fields we pass (TypeScript type).

type ExtraProps = {node?: Element | undefined}

Represent the children, typically a symbol (TypeScript type).

Create a production element (TypeScript type).

Element from your framework (JSX.Element if defined, otherwise unknown which you can cast yourself).

Create a development element (TypeScript type).

Element from your framework (JSX.Element if defined, otherwise unknown which you can cast yourself).

Configuration (TypeScript type).

Properties and children (TypeScript type).

import type {Element} from 'hast'

type Props = {
  [prop: string]:
    | Array<JSX.Element | string | null | undefined> // For `children`.
    | Record<string, string> // For `style`.
    | Element // For `node`.
    | boolean
    | number
    | string
    | undefined
  children: Array<JSX.Element | string | null | undefined> | undefined
  node?: Element | undefined
}

Info about source (TypeScript type).

Namespace (TypeScript type).

👉 Note: hast is not XML; it supports SVG as embedded in HTML; it does not support the features available in XML; passing SVG might break but fragments of modern SVG should be fine; use xast if you need to support SVG as XML.

type Space = 'html' | 'svg'

Casing to use for property names in style objects (TypeScript type).

CSS casing is for example background-color and -webkit-line-clamp. DOM casing is for example backgroundColor and WebkitLineClamp.

type StylePropertyNameCase = 'css' | 'dom'

The following errors are thrown:

Expected `Fragment` in options

This error is thrown when either options is not passed at all or when options.Fragment is undefined.

The automatic JSX runtime needs a symbol for a fragment to work.

To solve the error, make sure you are passing the correct fragment symbol from your framework.

Expected `jsxDEV` in options when `development: true`

This error is thrown when options.development is turned on (true), but when options.jsxDEV is not a function.

The automatic JSX runtime, in development, needs this function.

To solve the error, make sure you are importing the correct runtime functions (for example, 'react/jsx-dev-runtime'), and pass jsxDEV.

Expected `jsx` in production options Expected `jsxs` in production options

These errors are thrown when options.development is not turned on (false or not defined), and when options.jsx or options.jsxs are not functions.

The automatic JSX runtime, in production, needs these functions.

To solve the error, make sure you are importing the correct runtime functions (for example, 'react/jsx-runtime'), and pass jsx and jsxs.

Cannot handle MDX estrees without `createEvaluater`

This error is thrown when MDX nodes are passed that represent JavaScript programs or expressions.

Supporting JavaScript can be unsafe and requires a different project. To support JavaScript, pass a createEvaluater function in options.

Cannot parse `style` attribute

This error is thrown when a style attribute is found on an element, which cannot be parsed as CSS.

Most frameworks don’t accept style as a string, so we need to parse it as CSS, and pass it as an object. But when broken CSS is used, such as style="color:red; /*", we crash.

To solve the error, make sure authors write valid CSS. Alternatively, pass options.ignoreInvalidStyle: true to swallow these errors.

👉 Note: you must set elementAttributeNameCase: 'html' for preact.

In Node.js, do:

import {h} from 'hastscript'
import {toJsxRuntime} from 'hast-util-to-jsx-runtime'
import {Fragment, jsx, jsxs} from 'preact/jsx-runtime'
import {render} from 'preact-render-to-string'

const result = render(
  toJsxRuntime(h('h1', 'hi!'), {
    Fragment,
    jsx,
    jsxs,
    elementAttributeNameCase: 'html'
  })
)

console.log(result)

Yields:

In a browser, do:

import {h} from 'https://esm.sh/hastscript@9'
import {toJsxRuntime} from 'https://esm.sh/hast-util-to-jsx-runtime@2'
import {Fragment, jsx, jsxs} from 'https://esm.sh/preact@10/jsx-runtime'
import {render} from 'https://esm.sh/preact@10'

render(
  toJsxRuntime(h('h1', 'hi!'), {
    Fragment,
    jsx,
    jsxs,
    elementAttributeNameCase: 'html'
  }),
  document.getElementById('root')
)

To add better type support, register a global JSX namespace:

import type {JSX as Jsx} from 'preact/jsx-runtime'

declare global {
  namespace JSX {
    type ElementClass = Jsx.ElementClass
    type Element = Jsx.Element
    type IntrinsicElements = Jsx.IntrinsicElements
  }
}

👉 Note: you must set elementAttributeNameCase: 'html' and stylePropertyNameCase: 'css' for Solid.

In Node.js, do:

import {h} from 'hastscript'
import {toJsxRuntime} from 'hast-util-to-jsx-runtime'
import {Fragment, jsx, jsxs} from 'solid-jsx/jsx-runtime'

console.log(
  toJsxRuntime(h('h1', 'hi!'), {
    Fragment,
    jsx,
    jsxs,
    elementAttributeNameCase: 'html',
    stylePropertyNameCase: 'css'
  }).t
)

Yields:

In a browser, do:

import {h} from 'https://esm.sh/hastscript@9'
import {toJsxRuntime} from 'https://esm.sh/hast-util-to-jsx-runtime@2'
import {Fragment, jsx, jsxs} from 'https://esm.sh/solid-js@1/h/jsx-runtime'
import {render} from 'https://esm.sh/solid-js@1/web'

render(Component, document.getElementById('root'))

function Component() {
  return toJsxRuntime(h('h1', 'hi!'), {
    Fragment,
    jsx,
    jsxs,
    elementAttributeNameCase: 'html',
    stylePropertyNameCase: 'css'
  })
}

To add better type support, register a global JSX namespace:

import type {JSX as Jsx} from 'solid-js/jsx-runtime'

declare global {
  namespace JSX {
    type ElementClass = Jsx.ElementClass
    type Element = Jsx.Element
    type IntrinsicElements = Jsx.IntrinsicElements
  }
}

I have no clue how to render a Svelte component in Node, but you can get that component with:

import {h} from 'hastscript'
import {toJsxRuntime} from 'hast-util-to-jsx-runtime'
import {Fragment, jsx, jsxs} from 'svelte-jsx'

const svelteComponent = toJsxRuntime(h('h1', 'hi!'), {Fragment, jsx, jsxs})

console.log(svelteComponent)

Yields:

[class Component extends SvelteComponent]

Types for Svelte are broken. Raise it with Svelte.

👉 Note: you must set elementAttributeNameCase: 'html' for Vue.

In Node.js, do:

import serverRenderer from '@vue/server-renderer'
import {h} from 'hastscript'
import {toJsxRuntime} from 'hast-util-to-jsx-runtime'
import {Fragment, jsx, jsxs} from 'vue/jsx-runtime' // Available since `vue@3.3`.

console.log(
  await serverRenderer.renderToString(
    toJsxRuntime(h('h1', 'hi!'), {
      Fragment,
      jsx,
      jsxs,
      elementAttributeNameCase: 'html'
    })
  )
)

Yields:

In a browser, do:

import {h} from 'https://esm.sh/hastscript@9'
import {toJsxRuntime} from 'https://esm.sh/hast-util-to-jsx-runtime@2'
import {createApp} from 'https://esm.sh/vue@3'
import {Fragment, jsx, jsxs} from 'https://esm.sh/vue@3/jsx-runtime'

createApp(Component).mount('#root')

function Component() {
  return toJsxRuntime(h('h1', 'hi!'), {
    Fragment,
    jsx,
    jsxs,
    elementAttributeNameCase: 'html'
  })
}

To add better type support, register a global JSX namespace:

import type {JSX as Jsx} from 'vue/jsx-runtime'

declare global {
  namespace JSX {
    type ElementClass = Jsx.ElementClass
    type Element = Jsx.Element
    type IntrinsicElements = Jsx.IntrinsicElements
  }
}

HTML is parsed according to WHATWG HTML (the living standard), which is also followed by browsers such as Chrome, Firefox, and Safari.

Projects maintained by the unified collective are compatible with maintained versions of Node.js.

When we cut a new major release, we drop support for unmaintained versions of Node. This means we try to keep the current release line, hast-util-to-jsx-runtime@2, compatible with Node.js 16.

Be careful with user input in your hast tree. Use hast-util-santize to make hast trees safe.

See contributing.md in syntax-tree/.github for ways to get started. See support.md for ways to get help.

This project has a code of conduct. By interacting with this repository, organization, or community you agree to abide by its terms.

MIT © Titus Wormer


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