199 lines
8.4 KiB
Markdown
199 lines
8.4 KiB
Markdown
# 🪄 Renderers
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Astro is designed to support your favorite UI frameworks. [React](https://npm.im/@astrojs/renderer-react), [Svelte](https://npm.im/@astrojs/renderer-svelte), [Vue](https://npm.im/@astrojs/renderer-vue), and [Preact](https://npm.im/@astrojs/renderer-preact) are all built-in to Astro and supported out of the box. No configuration is needed to enable these.
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Internally, each framework is supported via a framework **renderer.** A renderer is a type of Astro plugin that adds support for a framework. Some are built-in, but you can also provide your own third-party renderers to add Astro support for new frameworks.
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## What is a renderer?
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A renderer is an NPM package that has two responsiblities:
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1. _render a component to a static string of HTML_ at build time
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2. _rehydrate that HTML to create an interactive component_ on the client.
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Take a look at any one of Astro's built-in [`renderers`](https://github.com/snowpackjs/astro/tree/main/packages/renderers) to see this in action. We'll go into more detail in the following sections.
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## Add a renderer to Astro
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Astro enables a few popular framework renderers by default. If you want to add a new renderer to your project, you first need to set the built-in renderers that you care about.
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```js
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// astro.config.js
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export default {
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renderers: [
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// Add the framework renderers that you want to enable for your project.
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// If you set an empty array here, no UI frameworks will work.
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// '@astrojs/renderer-svelte',
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// '@astrojs/renderer-vue',
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// '@astrojs/renderer-react',
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// '@astrojs/renderer-preact',
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],
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};
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```
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To add a new custom renderer, install the npm package dependency in your project and then update the `renderers` array to include it:
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```js
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// astro.config.js
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export default {
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renderers: ['my-custom-renderer', '@astrojs/renderer-svelte', '@astrojs/renderer-vue', '@astrojs/renderer-react', '@astrojs/renderer-preact'],
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};
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```
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#### Managing Framework Versions
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In Astro, the renderer plugin defines which version of your framework to use with Astro. This should be set to as wide of a range as possible, but often will be pinned to a specific major version:
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- `@astrojs/renderer-vue`: `"vue": "^3.0.0"`
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- `@astrojs/renderer-react`: `"react": "^17.0.0"`
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- See all: https://github.com/snowpackjs/astro/tree/main/packages/renderers
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This is required because the renderer itself also uses these packages and requires a specific API to work. For example, If the user updated from Vue 2 to Vue 3 (or vice versa) then the renderer itself would break since the `vue` package would have changed.
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**What if I want to use a beta framework (ex: react@next)?** Check to see if the renderer has a `@next` version that you could manually install and use. If one doesn't exist, feel free to request it: https://github.com/snowpackjs/astro/issues/new/choose
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**What if I need to override the framework version in my project?** You can use the "resolutions" feature of many npm package managers to override or pin the framework version for your entire project. Just be sure to select a version that is compatible with your renderer:
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- **yarn:** https://classic.yarnpkg.com/en/docs/selective-version-resolutions/
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- **pnpm:** https://pnpm.io/package_json#pnpmoverrides
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- **npm:** see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/15806152/how-do-i-override-nested-npm-dependency-versions
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## Building Your Own Renderer
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> **Building a renderer?** We'd love for you to contribute renderers for popular frameworks back to the Astro repo. Feel free to open an issue or pull request to discuss.
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A simple renderer only needs a few files:
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```
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/my-custom-renderer/
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├── package.json
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├── index.js
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├── server.js
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└── client.js
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```
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### Package Manifest (`package.json`)
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A renderer should include any framework dependencies as package dependencies. For example, `@astrojs/renderer-react` includes `react` & `react-dom` as dependencies in the `package.json` manifest.
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```js
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// package.json
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"name": "@astrojs/renderer-react",
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"dependencies": {
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"react": "^17.0.0",
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"react-dom": "^17.0.0"
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}
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```
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This means that Astro users don't need to install the UI framework packages themselves. The renderer is the only package that your users will need to install.
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### Renderer Entrypoint (`index.js`)
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The main entrypoint of a renderer is a simple JS file which exports a manifest for the renderer. The required values are `name`, `server`, and `client`.
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Additionally, this entrypoint can define a [Snowpack plugin](https://www.snowpack.dev/guides/plugins) that should be used to load non-JavaScript files.
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```js
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export default {
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name: '@astrojs/renderer-xxx', // the renderer name
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client: './client.js', // relative path to the client entrypoint
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server: './server.js', // relative path to the server entrypoint
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snowpackPlugin: '@snowpack/plugin-xxx', // optional, the name of a snowpack plugin to inject
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snowpackPluginOptions: { example: true }, // optional, any options to be forwarded to the snowpack plugin
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knownEntrypoint: ['framework'], // optional, entrypoint modules that will be used by compiled source
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};
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```
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### Server Entrypoint (`server.js`)
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The server entrypoint of a renderer is responsible for checking if a component should use this renderer, and if so, how that component should be rendered to a string of static HTML.
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```js
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export default {
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// should Component use this renderer?
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check(Component, props, childHTML) {},
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// Component => string of static HTML
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renderToStaticMarkup(Component, props, childHTML) {},
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};
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```
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#### `check`
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`check` is a function that determines whether a Component should be "claimed" by this renderer.
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In it's simplest form, it can check for the existence of a flag on Object-based components.
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```js
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function check(Component) {
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return Component.isMyFrameworkComponent;
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}
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```
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In more complex scenarios, like when a Component is a `Function` without any flags, you may need to use `try/catch` to attempt a full render. This result is cached so that it only runs once per-component.
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```js
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function check(Component, props, childHTML) {
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try {
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const { html } = renderToStaticMarkup(Component, props, childHTML);
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return Boolean(html);
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} catch (e) {}
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return false;
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}
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```
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#### `renderToStaticMarkup`
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`renderToStaticMarkup` is a function that renders a Component to a static string of HTML. There's usually a method exported by frameworks named something like `renderToString`.
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```js
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import { renderToString } from 'xxx';
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function renderToStaticMarkup(Component, props, childHTML) {
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const html = renderToString(h(Component, { ...props, innerHTML: childHTML }));
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return { html };
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}
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```
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Note that `childHTML` is an HTML string representing this component's children. If your framework does not support rendering HTML directly, you are welcome to use a wrapper component. By convention, Astro uses the `astro-fragment` custom element to inject `childHTML` into. Your renderer should use that, too.
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```js
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import { h, renderToString } from 'xxx';
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const Wrapper = ({ value }) => h('astro-fragment', { dangerouslySetInnerHTML: { __html: value } });
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function renderToStaticMarkup(Component, props, childHTML) {
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const html = renderToString(h(Component, props, h(Wrapper, { value: childHTML })));
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return { html };
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}
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```
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### Client Entrypoint (`client.js`)
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The client entrypoint of a renderer is responsible for rehydrating static HTML (the result of `renderToStaticMarkup`) back into a fully interactive component. Its `default` export should be a `function` which accepts the host element of the Component, an `astro-root` custom element.
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> If your framework supports non-destructive component hydration (as opposed to a destructive `render` method), be sure to use that! Following your framework's Server Side Rendering (SSR) guide should point you in the right direction.
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```js
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import { hydrate } from 'xxx';
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export default (element) => {
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return (Component, props, childHTML) => {
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hydrate(h(Component, { ...props, innerHTML: childHTML }), element);
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};
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};
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```
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Note that `childHTML` is an HTML string representing this component's children. If your framework does not support rendering HTML directly, you should use the same wrapper component you used for the server entrypoint.
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```js
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import { h, hydrate } from 'xxx';
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import SharedWrapper from './SharedWrapper.js';
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export default (element) => {
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return (Component, props, childHTML) => {
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hydrate(h(Component, props, h(SharedWrapper, { value: childHTML })), element);
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};
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};
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```
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[astro-config]: ./config.md
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